JON KATZ, P.C.

Attorney at Law

LAWYER FOR JUSTICE

 

Practicing Law Throughout Maryland, Washington, D.C., and Virginia

 

 

Jon Katz, P.C. CHAMPIONS FIRST AMENDMENT AGAINST

 

ANTI-RUNNER/SOLICITATION BILL

 

FIGHTING FOR FIRST AMENDMENT RIGHTS

LIBEL DEFENSE / ADULT ENTERTAINMENT / MEDIA LAW / INTERNET LAW

 

Listed in Martindale-Hubbell's Bar Register of Pre-Eminent Lawyers

 

Washingtonian Magazine's "Top Lawyers" (2004, Partner Jon Katz).

 

INTERVIEWED ON FIRST AMENDMENT LAW ON NBC'S TODAY SHOW, O'REILLY FACTOR & MSNBC TV; LOCAL CBS & NBC NEWS; BBC & CNN RADIO; WASHINGTON POST, USA TODAY & ASSOCIATED PRESS (click here).

 

"Jonathan Katz, an eminent First Amendment lawyer in Silver Spring, Maryland" Foundation for Individual Rights in Education.

 

 

Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances. First Amendment to the United States Constitution.

 

"Monsieur l'abbé, I detest what you write, but I would give my life to make it possible for you to continue to write." Voltaire, letter to M. le Riche, February 6, 1770.

 

NOTE: JON KATZ, P.C., is home to strong devotion to robust free expression. In that regard, partner Jon Katz sent the following letter to the District of Columbia City Council:

February 28, 2006

Honorable Phil Mendelson

Chairperson
Committee on the Judiciary
Council of the District of Columbia
1350 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington , DC 20004

Tel: 202-724-8064

Fax: 202-724-8099

PMendelson@dccouncil.us

            Re: Bill 16-208 (the “White Collar Insurance Fraud Prosecution Enhancement Amendment Act of 2005”)

Dear Chairperson Mendelson:

            Having carefully reviewed and analyzed the latest version of Bill 16-208 (the Bill), I urge the deletion of all provisions prohibiting contact with injury victims, and prohibiting and penalizing the use of runners who solicit clients for lawyers (collectively, anti-solicitation provisions).

             By way of introduction, I am a trial lawyer focusing on criminal defense, First Amendment defense, and Constitutional defense. I have no financial stake in this legislation, I disapprove of the use of runners in injury cases, and have never used them. I have litigated many injury cases on behalf of victims, have never been on the opposite side (other than libel defense), and have never represented any insurance company. I represent no client concerning the Bill.

             For many years, I have been a member of the Trial Lawyers Association of the District of Columbia (TLA-DC). Because the TLA-DC has been supporting Bill 16-208, I find it particularly important to voice my opposition to the Bill's anti-solicitation provisions, because the TLA-DC does not speak in my name whatsoever in this instance.  

            When lawyers obtain clients through runners who rush to accident scenes and hospitals, or by doing so themselves, they help perpetuate the stereotype of the lawyer ambulance chaser. I fully disapprove of such practices.

             However, society is rife with distasteful expressive practices that are not prohibited by law -- and should not be so prohibited -- from pushy door-to-door solicitors to leafleters supporting offensive causes to Muzak.

             There is insufficient justification for the Bill to prohibit solicitation by runners and lawyers. Lawyers opposing runners and in-person solicitations  should not be seeking legislative intervention; propping up a profession's image does not belong with the government. Moreover, before further fattening the D.C. Code, let us remember that remedies already exist against such related actions as disruption at hospitals and harassment. See, e.g., D.C. Code §§ 22-1314.02 (penalizing harassment and disruption at medical facilities) and 22-404 (penalizing harassment and stalking).

             Traditionally, lawyer solicitation has been regulated through codes of attorney professional conduct, and enforced by bar counsels. Ohralik v. Ohio State Bar Ass'n, 436 U.S. 447 (1978). Regulation through this route has enabled the traditional sanctions for lawyers' professional conduct violations; e.g. warnings, probation, suspension, and disbarment. Moreover, this route enables a more careful case-by-case evaluation to assure adherence to the courts' many pronouncements on First Amendment protections for lawyer solicitation than does the Bill's scheme of applying fines for prohibited solicitation.

             For enforcement of lawyers' alleged violations of professional conduct rules in the District of Columbia , the Bar Counsel's lawyers ordinarily step in, to help protect all sides' rights. However,  the Bill provides for fines for lawyer solicitations without injecting the safeguard of Bar Counsel involvement.  This places the accused lawyer in a particularly difficult situation. A mere accusation of a solicitation does not automatically mean the solicitation has taken place (particularly when it is unclear whether a runner is actually acting at the bidding of a particular lawyer). Ideally, a lawyer would fully contest false accusations of violating the anti-solicitation provisions. However, doing so  takes money to hire a lawyer, lest the lawyer parrots back the warning that a person who represents oneself in court has a fool for a client. On the other hand, for the lawyer not to vigorously contest such accusations -- even if the immediate sanction is not more than a $1000 fine -- brings the risk of being branded as one who runs afoul of the law.

             The anti-solicitation provisions are content-based restraints on speech, and violate the First Amendment. Florida Bar v. Went for It, 515 U.S. 618 (1995)[1]; Ficker v. Curran, 119 F.3d 1150 (4th Cir. 2002). The First Amendment exists not to protect speech that people like, but to protect distasteful speech, so that the free speech rights of all of us will be protected. It is not enough to ask whether the courts might uphold the Bill against a First Amendment challenge. Merely because a court upholds a statute does not automatically make the statute right. See, e.g.,  Dred Scott, 60 U.S. 393 (1857) (upholding slavery and the "right" of slaves' owners to treat them as chattels) and Plessy v. Ferguson, 163 U.S. 537 (1896) (permitting racial segregation).

             The trends in the courts' First Amendment jurisprudence will make it harder than ever for the anti-solicitation provisions to hold up in court against a First Amendment challenge. Governing Supreme Court case law does not permit anti-lawyer-solicitation laws absent legislative reliance on a study establishing the likelihood of significant harm of such solicitations. Florida Bar v. Went for It, 515 U.S. 618 (1995) (requiring data showing harm of lawyer solicitation before permitting an anti-solicitation scheme); Ficker v. Curran, 119 F.3d 1150 (overturning lawyer solicitation limits, where such a harm study was not used in passing the bill, and where the Maryland Attorney General reported -- before the bill's passage -- that it did not appear that such harm to consumers was likely); Los Angeles v. Alameda Books, 535 U.S. 425 (2002) (confirming the critical role of harm studies as a hurdle to passing content-based speech limits).

             A successful First Amendment challenge against the Bill's anti-solicitation provisions will expose the District government to substantial attorney's fees for the prevailing party. 42 U.S.C. § 1988(b); National Black Police Ass'n v. District of Columbia Bd. of Elections & Ethics, 168 F.3d 525, 528 (D.C. Cir. 1999). Fiscal responsibility calls for treading carefully before voting on such a bill.

             For all the foregoing reasons, I respectfully urge the deletion from Bill 16-208 of all provisions prohibiting contact with injury victims and prohibiting the use of runners who solicit clients for lawyers. If I can be of further assistance on this matter, I will be delighted to do so.

                                                                                     Respectfully,

                                                                                     Jonathan L. Katz
cc: City Council Members


[1] The next time the Supreme Court considers restrictions on lawyer solicitations, it may well provide even greater First Amendment protections against such restrictions. For instance, four of the nine justices in the Florida Bar v. Went for It  case, 515 U.S. 618 (1995), joined a scathing dissent against the majority. Those four dissenters remain on the Supreme Court, whereas only three justices from the majority in Went for It remain on the court.

 

     JON KATZ, P.C. - ADVOCATING FOR FIRST AMENDMENT RIGHTS

JON KATZ, P.C., fights passionately for First Amendment rights.  The First Amendment looks beautiful on the printed page, but too many government forces and judges want to give more lip service than life to the First Amendment,  JON KATZ, P.C., steps forward again and again to argue to courts and government agencies to protect all our clients' First Amendment rights.  The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education recognizes partner Jon Katz as "an eminent First Amendment lawyer." We stand ready to defend everyone's First Amendment rights, regardless of how controversial the expression or the client.

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Jon Katz, P.C. advocates for justice often in the most heated of arenas, whether it be before initially-skeptical juries, judges firing off questions at a machine-gun clip, or such highly-charged settings as the O'Reilly Factor. For a taste of our advocating style, click our recent Fox News interview below (O'Reilly Factor, Jan. 25, 2006, and rebroadcast during Super Bowl Sunday halftime), and click here for more news appearances. 

 

          

                      

 

Click above, and view with Windows Media Player. Rebroadcast courtesy Fox News.

 

JONATHAN L. KATZ  (Admitted in MD/DC/VA state and federal courts, and the U.S. Supreme Court) Se habla español. On parle français

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