In re Petition for Disciplinary Action against R. James Jensen, Jr., a Minnesota Attorney, Registration No. 0164409. ...

Minnesota Supreme Court

In re Petition for Disciplinary Action against R. James Jensen, Jr., a Minnesota Attorney, Registration No. 0164409. ...

Opinion

                                STATE OF MINNESOTA

                                  IN SUPREME COURT

                                         A24-0113


Original Jurisdiction                                                       Per Curiam
                                                                 Took no part, Gaïtas, J.


In re Petition for Disciplinary Action against                  Filed: October 23, 2024
R. James Jensen, Jr., a Minnesota Attorney,                   Office of Appellate Courts
Registration No. 0164409
.

                              ________________________


Susan M. Humiston, Director, Office of Lawyers Professional Responsibility, Saint Paul,
Minnesota, for petitioner.

R. James Jensen, Jr., Roseville, Minnesota, pro se.

                              ________________________

SYLLABUS

       Disbarment is appropriate reciprocal discipline where an attorney disobeyed many

court orders, made misrepresentations to a tribunal, filed numerous frivolous motions and

appeals, engaged in dishonest conduct, and was disbarred in another jurisdiction for that

misconduct.

       Disbarred.




                                             1

OPINION

PER CURIAM.

       The Director of the Office of Lawyers Professional Responsibility (the Director)

filed a petition for reciprocal discipline against R. James Jensen, Jr. upon learning that he

had been disbarred in Washington state in 2018. See In re Jensen (Jensen IV), 
430 P.3d 262, 273
 (Wash. 2018). The Washington Supreme Court disbarred Jensen for conduct

including   violating   court   orders,   engaging     in   frivolous   litigation,   making

misrepresentations to multiple courts, and contacting opposing parties he knew to be

represented by counsel. The misconduct did not involve his representation of clients but

arose out of personal legal matters—his divorce and related property disputes. 
Id.
 Jensen

has a considerable disciplinary history based on similar misconduct in representing clients,

including a reprimand, an admonition, and an indefinite suspension. We conclude that

disbarment is an appropriate sanction.

                                          FACTS

       Jensen was admitted to practice law in Minnesota in May 1985. We publicly

reprimanded him in 1991, In re Jensen (Jensen I), 
468 N.W.2d 541, 546
 (Minn. 1991);

admonished him in 1995, Appeal of Admonition Regarding A.M.E. (Jensen II),

533 N.W.2d 849, 851
 (Minn. 1995); and indefinitely suspended him for a minimum of 18

months in 1996. In re Jensen (Jensen III), 
542 N.W.2d 627, 634
 (Minn. 1996). His past

misconduct included disobeying court orders and violating procedural rules of appeal,

Jensen I, 468 N.W.2d at 544–45, as well as asserting frivolous claims, refusing to make




                                             2
court-ordered payments, and making misrepresentations to judicial officers. Jensen III,

542 N.W.2d at 634
.

       We reinstated Jensen to practice law in Minnesota in 1999.            In re Jensen,

593 N.W.2d 240, 241
 (Minn. 1999) (order).          In 2003, Jensen was administratively

suspended in Minnesota for nonpayment of annual registration fees. There is no evidence

that he has represented any client as a Minnesota attorney since the 1996 suspension. In

2007, he moved to Washington state, where he was admitted to practice in 2008.

       In 2018, the Washington Supreme Court disbarred Jensen. Jensen IV, 
430 P.3d at 273
. “Unless we determine otherwise, a final determination in another jurisdiction that a

lawyer has committed misconduct conclusively establishes that misconduct for purposes

of our reciprocal discipline proceeding.” In re Wolff, 
810 N.W.2d 312, 316
 (Minn. 2012);

see Rule 12(d), Rules on Lawyers Professional Responsibility (RLPR). Aside from his

claims discussed below—that imposition of reciprocal discipline would be “unfair,”

“unjust,” and “substantially different from discipline warranted in Minnesota”—Jensen

failed to provide any reason to not find conclusive the Washington Supreme Court’s final

determination that he engaged in the misconduct at issue. As a result, we treat the findings

from the Washington proceeding as conclusive. The findings by the Washington Supreme

Court are set forth below.

       The Mukilteo House

       In 2013, Jensen’s wife, Therese, who was suffering from severe multiple sclerosis,

filed for divorce. Jensen and Therese owned a home in Mukilteo, Washington, which

Therese wanted to sell as part of the dissolution proceedings. On December 24, 2013, she


                                             3
secured a court order to control and list the house for sale. She contacted a real estate

agent, L.F., to help sell the house.

       In January 2014, Jensen placed a “for sale by owner” sign on the front lawn. He

refused L.F.’s request to remove his sign. When workers later came to install L.F.’s “for

sale” sign, Jensen tore the post out of the ground. He also placed a note on the front door

which stated, “Buyer Beware Title is unlikely to be cleared for A sale – call [Jensen’s

phone number].” On January 22, 2014, Jensen sent an email to L.F. and to Therese’s

attorney telling them that they could not sell the home.

       On February 10, 2014, a Washington superior court found that Jensen had

“obstruct[ed] the listing and sale” of the house and ordered him to “fully cooperate with

the sale . . . up to [the] point of signing closing document[s].” At the hearing, he agreed to

cooperate. The next day, Jensen filed a motion with the court in which he claimed that he

had “made no efforts of any kind” to obstruct Therese’s sale of the home. On February 12,

2014, the court was informed that Jensen’s “for sale by owner” sign was still on the lawn.

       Therese received a written offer on the house, but on February 14, Jensen phoned

the buyer’s agent and said that he intended to block the sale by refusing to sign sale

documents. He then offered to sign the documents, but only if the buyer agreed to secretly

pay him an extra $50,000 outside the sale and escrow process. The agent refused.

       The court approved the pending sale of the house; in response, Jensen filed several

motions with the court and the Washington State Court of Appeals. The court of appeals

found for Therese and awarded her attorney fees. Jensen still refused to sign the documents




                                              4
and the buyer backed out of the sale. The stress of these events exacerbated Therese’s

multiple sclerosis symptoms.

       A second buyer made an offer on the home and Jensen advised that he would not

obstruct this sale. He conveyed the property to Therese by quitclaim deed but misspelled

his name on the deed. He then refused to correct this misspelling and threatened litigation

against the title company if it closed on the sale. The superior court ordered Jensen to

cooperate in the finalization of all sale documents, but he refused and the court sanctioned

him. Therese eventually convinced a second title company to close the sale with the

existing quitclaim deed, but only after she agreed to indemnify the title company. Jensen

then wrote letters to the buyers and their mortgage company claiming that the sale was void

and that he might still own the house.

       The court eventually concluded that Jensen was a vexatious litigant and required

him to post a $10,000 bond before filing any additional pleadings in that court.

       The Savage Property

       Prior to their marriage dissolution, Jensen and Therese jointly owned stock in

Apollo Land Company (Apollo) whose sole asset was a parcel of land in Savage,

Minnesota. In 2014, Jensen returned to Minnesota and changed the mailing address for

Apollo to his home in Minnesota so that property tax notices were sent there. In May 2014,

the Savage property was sold to the State to pay delinquent real property taxes and Jensen

and Therese signed an agreement awarding all stock in the business to Jensen. In August,




                                             5
Jensen registered a new company, the M.J. Scott Company, with the State of Minnesota,

and in September, that company purchased the Savage property for $500 or less.

       In late September 2014, Jensen filed a signed declaration with the superior court in

Washington stating that Therese had lost the property by failing to pay property taxes and

that this rendered worthless the Apollo stock that had been transferred to him. He sought

$150,000 for the lost value of the company. He did not disclose that the tax delinquency

notices were sent to him (not Therese) nor that he had purchased the property for $500 or

less. Counsel for Therese discovered these facts and informed the court. The court denied

Jensen compensation for the alleged loss of the Savage property.

       Continued Litigation

       Jensen and Therese owned other property in Minnesota, some with Therese’s

brother, J.B.   During litigation over these properties, Therese and J.B. were each

represented by counsel, but Jensen wrote repeated letters and emails to the parties directly,

copying their attorneys on the messages. Jensen sent threats to J.B. and Therese, saying

J.B. would go to jail and that, if Jensen was disbarred, Therese’s alimony would be lowered.

He also referred to opposing counsel as “a shill” and “dirtball scum.”

       Jensen continued to litigate in Minnesota. In April 2015, the district court in Anoka

County granted Therese and J.B.’s motion for sanctions against Jensen, finding that he had

made misrepresentations of fact and acted in a “vexatious and oppressive manner.” In

June, it imposed $20,747.50 in sanctions against Jensen. Later that month, the court

ordered Jensen to stop contacting opposing parties and found that Jensen had repeatedly

brought motions with misrepresentations of fact and little or no basis in law.


                                             6
       The Washington Disciplinary Proceedings

       The Washington State Bar Association (WSBA) charged Jensen with six counts of

violating rules of professional conduct. Jensen IV, 
430 P.3d at 266
. During discovery,

Jensen moved to serve interrogatories and document production requests on Therese’s

attorney so that he could gather evidence of damages Therese suffered and attorneys’ fees

she had paid. The hearing officer denied this request. Jensen told the disciplinary body

that he would not attend the disciplinary hearing—in violation of Washington Rules for

the Enforcement of Lawyer Conduct Rule 10.13(b)—but would “save [his] arguing for the

appeal to the [Washington] Supreme Court.” Jensen IV, 
430 P.3d at 267
.

       The hearing officer found that the WSBA proved all six counts by a preponderance

of the evidence and found that there were several aggravating factors and no mitigating

factors. He recommended disbarment and the WSBA Disciplinary Board unanimously

adopted that recommendation. The Supreme Court of Washington agreed and disbarred

Jensen. Jensen IV, 
430 P.3d at 273
. The court required, as a condition to be reinstated to

the Washington bar, that Jensen pay all judgments owed to J.B., Therese, and the Therese

Brown Jensen Trust (the Trust). 1 The Director filed a petition for disciplinary action

seeking reciprocal discipline in response to Jensen’s disbarment in Washington.

                                       ANALYSIS

       Rule 12(d), RLPR, provides that the Director, upon learning that a lawyer has been

publicly disciplined in another jurisdiction, may file a petition for reciprocal disciplinary


1
       The record does not explain Jensen’s interactions with the Trust and does not
include details of any judgments he owes to the Trust.

                                             7
action in this court. This allows for a more streamlined process by bypassing the hearing

process before a Minnesota referee. We may impose discipline identical to that imposed

in the other jurisdiction “unless it appears that discipline procedures in the other jurisdiction

were unfair, or the imposition of the same discipline would be unjust or substantially

different from discipline warranted in Minnesota.” Rule 12(d), RLPR. In other words,

there are three grounds—aside from our discretion—to not impose reciprocal discipline:

unfair proceedings, identical discipline would be unjust, or the discipline warranted in

Minnesota would be substantially different than that imposed by the other jurisdiction.

Jensen raises all three arguments and we address them in turn.

                                               A.

       We will not impose reciprocal discipline if the proceedings in the other jurisdiction

were unfair. See, e.g., In re Koss, 
572 N.W.2d 276, 278
 (Minn. 1997) (refusing to impose

reciprocal discipline where the other jurisdiction imposed discipline without a hearing and

without considering mitigating circumstances). A jurisdiction’s disciplinary procedures

are fair if they are consistent with the principles of fundamental fairness and due process.

Wolff, 
810 N.W.2d at 316
. To determine the fairness of disciplinary proceedings in another

jurisdiction, “we review the underlying record to see if the attorney received notice of the

proceedings and the allegations against him, and had the opportunity to respond to those




                                               8
allegations and offer evidence of mitigating circumstances.” In re Overboe, 
867 N.W.2d 482, 486
 (Minn. 2015).

       Jensen offers two reasons that the Washington disciplinary proceedings were

unfair. 2 Both fail. First, Jensen argues that he was unfairly denied the opportunity to serve

interrogatories on a third party to learn of “damages that were being suffered by” Therese

and fees she had paid to her attorney. This information is not relevant to Jensen’s conduct

or to mitigating or aggravating circumstances and he admitted as much at oral argument.

Because he was not prejudiced by lack of that discovery, his first unfairness argument fails.

See Overboe, 
867 N.W.2d at 486
 (noting that a delay in North Dakota’s disciplinary

proceedings did not “destroy the fundamental fairness of the entire process” because the

attorney failed to prove he was prejudiced by the delay).

       Second, Jensen argues that he was denied access to privileged information in his

WSBA disciplinary file. The Washington Supreme Court rejected this contention because

there was no record support for his claim that he was not allowed to access the file. 3

Jensen IV, 
430 P.3d at 272
. Jensen could have testified at his hearing to create such a




2
        Jensen raises a related argument, asserting that his former brother-in-law, J.B., has
been exercising a nefarious influence over courts in Minnesota and in Washington. Jensen
claims that “[s]omething was wrong with the court[s]” because they “uniformly always
rule for” J.B. and claims that the Washington disbarment order was actually written by J.B.
We do not credit these arguments because they lack record support.
3
       In fact, the court order that Jensen submitted with his supplemental brief stated that
“Disciplinary Counsel has already provided substantial documentation and discovery to
[Jensen] . . . in excess of 1000 pages.”

                                              9
record but he willfully chose not to attend. Because this argument lacks record support, it

fails. See Lindgren v. City of Crystal, 
204 N.W.2d 444, 446
 (Minn. 1973).

                                               B.

       Jensen next argues that it would be unjust to impose reciprocal discipline because

“all of the facts relative to this matter occurred almost 10 years ago . . . and [he] is no longer

under the pressure of sending four children to college while caring for a profoundly

handicapped wife.” His first argument—that reciprocal discipline is inappropriate because

of the passage of time—is unpersuasive. The fact that reciprocal discipline is imposed long

after the misconduct does not render the discipline “unjust” unless the lawyer can identify

specific prejudice related to the delay. In re Sklar, 
929 N.W.2d 384, 390
 (Minn. 2019).

No such prejudice has been identified here. 4

       Jensen’s second argument—that the facts that led to his misconduct have

changed—is similarly unpersuasive. In In re Otis, 
582 N.W.2d 561
 (Minn. 1998), we held

that imposition of reciprocal discipline would be unjust because, by the time reciprocal

discipline was sought, the underlying cause of the misconduct had been addressed. 5 In that

case, a lawyer licensed in New Hampshire and Minnesota was disbarred by the New


4
       Moreover, much of this time elapsed because Jensen was disbarred in Washington
in 2018 and the Director only learned of this disbarment in 2023. Jensen should not be
allowed to benefit from his failure to notify OLPR of discipline in another jurisdiction. Cf.
Sklar, 
929 N.W.2d at 390
 (rejecting an attorney’s argument that a 10-year delay in
imposing reciprocal discipline was unjust where the delay was largely “because of [the
lawyer’s] own appeals”).
5
       Changed factual circumstances may not be the only grounds for considering
disciplinary proceedings “unjust,” but it is the only argument (aside from length of time
elapsed) raised by Jensen.

                                               10
Hampshire Supreme Court for improper sexual behavior toward clients. 
Id.
 at 561–62.

Four years later, the Director learned of the disbarment and sought reciprocal discipline

under Rule 12(d), RLPR. Otis, 
582 N.W.2d at 562, 563
. Otis introduced evidence that his

sexual behavior was the result of a seizure disorder, that he sought medical help for the

seizure disorder, and that he had the seizure disorder under control through medication. 
Id. at 562, 564
. He had not committed any similar conduct after getting the seizure disorder

under control, but the New Hampshire disciplinary proceeding occurred too early in his

treatment for the effects of the medication on his behavior to fully manifest. 
Id. at 564
.

       We observed that Otis had expressed remorse and that “at this time disbarment is

not necessary to protect the public.” 
Id. at 565
. We held that reciprocal discipline of

disbarment would be unjust and instead imposed a five-year suspension. 
Id.
 Under Otis,

then, imposing the same discipline in Minnesota that was imposed in another jurisdiction

may be “unjust” under Rule 12(d), RLPR, if the lawyer shows that the circumstances that

caused the misconduct have changed (especially if evidence of the change was not

available in the earlier disciplinary proceeding) and the discipline imposed in the other

jurisdiction is no longer necessary to protect the public.

       In this case, however, there is no evidence that the underlying causes of Jensen’s

misconduct have changed. Jensen suggests that his previous misconduct was due in part

to the stress of “sending four children to college while caring for a profoundly handicapped

wife.” This argument fails for two reasons. First, it would be inappropriate to excuse

Jensen’s obstructionist behavior during dissolution proceedings against his severely

handicapped wife because he was “caring for” her. Second, the stress of caring for loved


                                             11
ones was not the cause of Jensen’s misconduct. Jensen was not disciplined for missed

hearings or filing deadlines—things that might be excusable if an attorney’s home life

became chaotic. Rather, his misconduct involved disobeying court orders, lying to a

tribunal, and engaging in frivolous and vexatious litigation—all things that he was

sanctioned for when he practiced law in Minnesota in the 1990s. In other words, Jensen

does not address the root cause of his misconduct: his own inability to follow court orders

and assume responsibility for his actions. As a result, it would not be unjust to impose

reciprocal discipline.

                                            C.

       Jensen lastly argues that we would impose “substantially different” discipline for

this misconduct in original disciplinary proceedings in Minnesota. He argues that we

would not impose any discipline for his misconduct because (1) he was within his rights to

block the sale of the Mukilteo house, and (2) his conduct did not involve representation of

a client. In addition, he argues that, even if we would impose some discipline for his

misconduct, we would not disbar him. We address these arguments in turn.

                                            1.

       Jensen argues that his obstructionist behavior during the divorce was acceptable

because he “had every right to refuse to give away his property.” But crucially, attorneys

have an ethical obligation to obey court orders. 6 When Jensen disagreed with a trial court


6
       Jensen does not explicitly raise the argument before us, but the Washington court
construed his argument as one that his actions were justified by a “good faith” belief that
the law was on his side. Minnesota has a similar rule based on good faith. Minn. R. Prof.
Conduct 8.4 cmt. 8 (“A lawyer may refuse to comply with an obligation imposed by law

                                            12
order, he was entitled to appeal—an option he exercised at great length. But once a court

has adjudicated a dispute and appeals have been exhausted, attorneys are expected to abide

by the result. Attorneys, as officers of the court, have special obligations to conduct

themselves with candor before courts and obey court orders. Simply put, Jensen was

required to obey court orders and willfully failed to do so.

                                             2.

       Jensen also argues that reciprocal discipline is not warranted because his misconduct

did not involve representation of a client. 7 In fact, we have meted out considerable

discipline against attorneys even for misconduct not involving clients. See, e.g., In re

Ulanowski, 
800 N.W.2d 785, 797, 804
 (Minn. 2011) (suspending a lawyer for one year as

a result of misconduct including disobeying court rules and filing frivolous motions in his

own divorce proceeding); In re Crabtree, 
916 N.W.2d 869, 870
 (Minn. 2018) (order)




upon a good faith belief that no valid obligation exists.”). Jensen cannot avoid the
consequences for his misconduct by asserting a good-faith defense, however, where he has
continually failed “to acknowledge directly on-point contrary authorities, even after courts
have brought them to his attention.” Jensen IV, 
430 P.3d at 269
; see also In re Stanbury,
561 N.W.2d 507, 511
 (Minn. 1997) (holding that an attorney who had failed to pay debts
could not avail himself of the good-faith defense “[a]fter final judgment and exhaustion of
his legal appeals”), reinstatement granted, 
562 N.W.2d 685
 (Minn. 1997).
7
       Similarly, Jensen claims that “[n]o client has ever complained about [him] in any
court, nor has [he] ever been accused of taking any money, of neglecting a client, or of any
other misconduct involving a client.” This is false. His previous reprimand and suspension
were the result of misconduct involving clients, including mishandling client funds. See
generally Jensen I, 
468 N.W.2d 541
; Jensen III, 
542 N.W.2d 627
.

                                             13
(suspending an attorney for nine months because of, among other things, misleading

conduct in his personal bankruptcy proceeding).

       Notably, we have also disbarred attorneys whose misconduct arose solely in

situations where the lawyers represented themselves. See In re Graham, 
503 N.W.2d 476, 478, 480
 (Minn. 1993) (disbarring an attorney for failure to file income taxes, filing a

fabricated document in his own marriage dissolution proceeding, and providing false

testimony and fabricated documents in his personal bankruptcy); In re Hansmeier,

942 N.W.2d 167
, 169, 175 (Minn. 2020) (disbarring an attorney for fraudulent conduct

during his personal bankruptcy proceedings). In sum, the fact that no client was harmed

does not allow an attorney to escape discipline; even an attorney representing himself is

capable of inflicting great harm on the legal profession and the broader public.

                                            3.

       Having determined that we would impose some discipline for Jensen’s conduct, we

now consider whether discipline substantially different than that imposed by the

Washington Supreme Court is warranted in Minnesota.              Reciprocal discipline is

inappropriate if “substantially different” discipline is warranted in Minnesota for the

misconduct at issue. Rule 12(d), RLPR. This does not mean that we may only impose

reciprocal discipline if we would impose discipline identical to that imposed in the other

jurisdiction. See Overboe, 
867 N.W.2d at 487
 (noting that the question is “not whether we

might have imposed different discipline had [the lawyer’s] disciplinary proceedings

originated in Minnesota, but rather whether the discipline imposed by [the other

jurisdiction] is unjust or substantially different from discipline warranted in Minnesota”)


                                            14
(citation omitted) (internal quotation marks omitted); Wolff, 
810 N.W.2d at 317
 (noting

that reciprocal discipline is appropriate “only if similar discipline would be warranted in

Minnesota” (emphasis added)). Rather, the word “substantial” must carry some meaning.

Thus, Jensen must show not only that disbarment is outside the range of discipline we

would impose, but that it is substantially so.

       The goal of discipline is “not to punish the attorney, but rather to protect the public,

to protect the judicial system, and to deter future misconduct by the disciplined attorney as

well as by other attorneys.” In re Albrecht, 
779 N.W.2d 530, 540
 (Minn. 2010) (citation

omitted) (internal quotation marks omitted). In determining proper discipline, we consider

the nature of the misconduct, the cumulative weight of the disciplinary violations, the harm

to the public, harm to the legal profession, and aggravating and mitigating factors. In re

McCloud, 
998 N.W.2d 760
, 766–67 (Minn. 2023).

       “[W]illful disobedience [of] a single court order may alone justify disbarment.”

Sklar, 
929 N.W.2d at 389
 (quoting In re Daly, 
189 N.W.2d 176, 181
 (Minn. 1971)),

reinstatement granted, 
932 N.W.2d 10
 (Minn. 2019).             In addition, “[m]aking false

statements is misconduct of the highest order and warrants severe discipline.” In re

Hawkins, 
834 N.W.2d 663, 670
 (Minn. 2013) (citation omitted) (internal quotation marks

omitted). This is because, as we emphasized in Jensen’s previous disciplinary proceedings,

candor to the courts is necessary for our system of justice, and when a lawyer lacks that

“truthfulness and candor . . . courts do not hesitate to impose severe discipline.” Jensen III,

542 N.W.2d at 634
 (citation omitted).




                                              15
       Disbarment is not “substantially different” from the punishment we impose for

misconduct like Jensen’s. 8 Three cases illustrate this. In Graham, 503 N.W.2d at 478–79,

the lawyer had a limited disciplinary history (two admonitions) and his misconduct did not

involve a client—it involved his personal divorce, personal bankruptcy, and failure to file

income taxes. The lawyer’s misconduct included providing false testimony and fabricated



8
        One count of Jensen’s misconduct in Washington was for contacting represented
persons. Minnesota Rule of Professional Conduct 4.2 provides that “[i]n representing a
client, a lawyer shall not communicate about the subject of the representation with a person
the lawyer knows to be represented by another lawyer in the matter . . . .” (Emphasis
added.) And comment 4 to the rule states that “[p]arties to a matter may communicate
directly with each other.” 
Id.,
 at cmt 4.
        Several jurisdictions have interpreted the same language to mean that the no-contact
rule applies to self-represented attorneys. See In re Haley, 
126 P.3d 1262, 1269
 (Wash.
2006); Matter of Steele, 
181 N.E.3d 976
, 980 (Ind. 2022) (collecting cases); but see In re
Benson, 
69 P.3d 544, 548
 (Kan. 2003). This accords with a 2022 advisory opinion from
the American Bar Association. See ABA Comm. on Ethics & Pro. Resp., Formal Op.
22-502 (2022) (recommending that the no-contact rule should apply to self-represented
attorneys). We have not addressed whether the no-contact rule applies to self-represented
attorneys.
        We do not need to decide this issue today. For the contacts connected to litigation
in Washington, we apply Washington law. See Minn. R. Prof. Conduct 8.5(b)(1). Under
Washington law, a self-represented lawyer violates Rule 4.2 by contacting a represented
party, Haley, 
126 P.3d at 1269
, so we accept that a violation of the rule occurred. Our only
consideration, then, is the discipline we would impose for conduct that would constitute a
violation of Rule 4.2 in Minnesota (for instance, a lawyer representing a client who
communicated with a represented party). We have issued private admonitions, public
reprimands, and suspensions up to 60 days for such conduct. See In re Charges of
Unprofessional Conduct in Panel File No. 41755, 
912 N.W.2d 224, 233
 (Minn. 2018)
(private admonition); In re Wilson, 
746 N.W.2d 643, 644
 (Minn. 2008) (public reprimand
for communicating about the subject of representation in one case with a person the
respondent knew to be represented by the public defender’s office in another case); In re
McCormick, 
819 N.W.2d 442, 443, 445
 (Minn. 2012) (60-day suspension for instructing
investigator to interview anticipated witness without obtaining permission from witness’s
attorney), reinstatement granted, 
822 N.W.2d 646
 (Minn. 2012). Of course, this violation
must be considered with all the other misconduct Jensen committed in assessing whether
disbarment is substantially different than the discipline warranted in Minnesota.

                                            16
documents to multiple courts. We disbarred him because of his extensive pattern of

dishonesty and deceit. Id. at 479–80. Jensen’s misconduct is slightly different—it includes

failure to obey court orders and frivolous litigation, rather than fabricating documents—but

both cases have at their core a lack of respect for the courts and a pattern of intentional

dishonesty in a lawyer’s personal matters.

       Our decision in Ulanowski, 
800 N.W.2d at 797
, involved a wider array of

misconduct, some in representing clients and some involving the lawyer’s personal

divorce. That lawyer, like Jensen, made misrepresentations to the court, filed frivolous

claims, violated court rules, and harassed opposing counsel. Unlike Jensen, that lawyer

also improperly threatened criminal prosecution, improperly withdrew representation,

failed to communicate settlement offers to clients, and failed to cooperate in the discipline

proceedings. Like Graham, Ulanowski had a minimal disciplinary history (one prior

admonition). Ulanowski was disbarred. Although Ulanowski engaged in a wider array of

misconduct, similar discipline is potentially warranted because, as discussed below, Jensen

has a more extensive disciplinary history, including essentially identical misconduct.

       Finally, our opinion in Hansmeier, 
942 N.W.2d 167
, is instructive. In Hansmeier,

the attorney was disbarred for engaging in fraud in his personal bankruptcy. We found

especially troubling the fact that—like Jensen in this case—Hansmeier had previously been

suspended for making false statements to tribunals and abusing the legal process for

personal gain.

       Not only is Jensen’s misconduct similar to these three cases, but his consistent

disciplinary history and lack of remorse are problematic aggravating circumstances. We


                                             17
look to disciplinary history in part to determine whether the public is likely to be put at risk

if an attorney is allowed to continue practicing law. See McCloud, 998 N.W.2d at 769.

Our concern about the risk to the public is significantly greater “when the lawyer engages

in the same type of misconduct for which he has been previously disciplined.” Id. And

while “lack of remorse” should not aggravate discipline when the attorney is merely

asserting a good-faith defense, that is not the case here. Jensen’s refusal to accept any

responsibility for his actions—whether motivated by ignorance or malice—suggests that

he would pose a risk to the public if allowed to practice law.

         Accordingly, we conclude that disbarment is not substantially different from the

discipline that is warranted in Minnesota for Jensen’s conduct.

                                      CONCLUSION

         We hold that reciprocal discipline is appropriate. We order that, upon the filing of

this opinion, R. James Jensen, Jr. is disbarred from the practice of law in the State of

Minnesota. Jensen must comply with Rule 26, RLPR (requiring notice to clients, opposing

counsel, and tribunals), and must pay to the Director the sum of $900 in costs and

disbursements pursuant to Rule 24, RLPR. Consistent with the discipline imposed by the

Washington Supreme Court, Jensen will not be eligible for reinstatement to the practice of

law in Minnesota until he has paid all judgments owed by him to Therese, J.B., and the

Trust.

         Disbarred.




                                              18
       GAÏTAS, J., not having been a member of this court at the time of submission, took

no part in the consideration or decision of this case.




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Reference

Status
Published
Syllabus
Disbarment is appropriate reciprocal discipline where an attorney disobeyed many court orders, made misrepresentations to a tribunal, filed numerous frivolous motions and appeals, engaged in dishonest conduct, and was disbarred in another jurisdiction for that misconduct. Disbarred.