IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
No. 20–0844
Submitted October 14, 2020—Filed November 13, 2020
IOWA SUPREME COURT ATTORNEY DISCIPLINARY BOARD,
Complainant,
vs.
LORI JO KIEFFER-GARRISON,
Respondent.
On review of the report of the Iowa Supreme Court Grievance
Commission.
In an attorney disciplinary action, the grievance commission
recommends a one-year suspension for the attorney’s violation of ethical
rules. LICENSE SUSPENDED.
Christensen, C.J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which all
justices joined.
Tara van Brederode and Wendell J. Harms, Des Moines, for
complainant.
Lori J. Kieffer-Garrison, Davenport, pro se.
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CHRISTENSEN, Chief Justice.
The Iowa Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary Board charged an
Iowa attorney with violations of the Iowa Rules of Professional Conduct
after she failed to consult with her client before signing his name to court
filings, including a waiver of the client’s preliminary hearing and his right
to a speedy trial, and allegedly made knowingly false statements to the
court. The Iowa Supreme Court Grievance Commission found various
violations of our ethical rules and recommended suspending the attorney’s
license to practice law indefinitely for a period of at least one year from the
date of our holding in this matter. Upon our de novo review of the record,
we conclude the Board proved the alleged violations and suspend the
attorney’s license to practice law indefinitely with no possibility of
reinstatement for one year from the date of this opinion.
I. Factual and Procedural Background.
Lori Jo Kieffer-Garrison has been licensed to practice law in Iowa
since 2002. In her approximately eighteen years of practice in Iowa,
Kieffer-Garrison has incurred numerous sanctions for her violations of our
ethical rules of conduct. In 2009 and 2010, she was privately admonished
for violating Iowa Rules of Professional Conduct 32:1.3 and 32:8.4(d), each
time for failure to cure a notice of default from the clerk of this court. In
2010, she also received a public reprimand from our court for violating
rule 32:4.2 after she engaged in negotiations with an adverse party outside
the presence of said party’s counsel and prepared a handwritten
agreement for the adverse party to sign that already contained her client’s
signature. In 2014, we suspended Kieffer-Garrison’s license to practice
law for six months for violating rules 32:1.2(a), 32:1.3, 32:3.2, 32:3.3(a)(1),
32:8.4(c), and 32:8.4(d). See Iowa Supreme Ct. Att’y Disciplinary Bd. v.
Kieffer-Garrison, 847 N.W.2d 489, 492–96 (Iowa 2014). There, Kieffer-
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Garrison “repeatedly missed appellate deadlines in several criminal cases,
received twenty default notices as a consequence of those missed
deadlines, failed to pay resulting penalties in a timely fashion over a period
of two years,” and falsely represented to her client and the clerk of this
court that she had timely filed an application for further review in a
postconviction appeal by mail. Id. at 491–92.
Shortly after Kieffer-Garrison’s law license was reinstated, she was
publicly reprimanded in January 2015 for violating rules 32:1.1,
32:1.4(a)(2)–(4), 32:1.4(b), and 32:1.16(d) in the course of representing
three clients in postconviction-relief actions. Kieffer-Garrison failed to
inform one client of the court of appeals decision denying the client’s
postconviction-relief action within the time available to seek further review
by our court and of the need to apply for further review to preserve the
client’s ineffective assistance claim for possible federal habeas corpus
relief. In response to the complaint, Kieffer-Garrison declared she did not
practice in federal court and did not “know the procedures for habeas
corpus.”
She similarly failed to communicate with another client in a
postconviction-relief action, including communications about the next
step in his appeal after the court of appeals denied his application for
postconviction relief. Kieffer-Garrison also failed to take the steps
necessary to protect a client in another postconviction-relief action when
she was ordered to withdraw from representing the client and
subsequently ignored requests from the client and his new attorney for the
client’s file. The Board concluded a suspension was unnecessary because
her 2014 suspension “was contemporaneous or nearly contemporaneous”
with the misconduct at issue in the reprimand.
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Kieffer-Garrison was publicly reprimanded again in October 2017
for violating rules 32:3.4(c) and 32:8.4(d) after she cut her client’s
signature from a court document and attempted to attach the cutout
signature to a required pretrial conference form in front of a court
attendant. She also permitted her client to leave before the pretrial
conference had concluded, resulting in the district court’s issuance of a
bench warrant for the client’s failure to appear that led to the client’s arrest
and a pretrial conference at a later date.
The alleged violations in this case stem from Kieffer-Garrison’s
court-appointed representation of Joseph Johnson in a criminal case in
2019. The district court first appointed Kieffer-Garrison to represent
Johnson at his initial appearance on February 13, 2019. Kieffer-Garrison
filed an appearance and waived the preliminary hearing for Johnson’s case
the next day, and the district court subsequently canceled Johnson’s
preliminary hearing and scheduled his arraignment for March 14. Kieffer-
Garrison never communicated with Johnson about waiving the
preliminary hearing.
On February 15, Kieffer-Garrison wrote Johnson a letter noting her
appointment as his attorney and stated,
We must enter a written arraignment form and plea of not
guilty. Please complete the enclosed documents, sign where
indicated and return to me ASAP. I have provided a self-
addressed stamped envelope for your convenience. If an
arraignment form is not filed, a warrant will be issued for your
arrest.
Johnson never received the letter, and he arrived at the district court to
attend his preliminary hearing on February 22 because Kieffer-Garrison
did not inform him she had advised the court it was being waived. On
March 12, Kieffer-Garrison filed a written arraignment and plea of not
guilty on Johnson’s behalf, which included a signature purporting to be
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Johnson’s, dated March 11, on the written arraignment and the plea of
not guilty. However, as of March 12, Kieffer-Garrison had yet to
communicate with Johnson or receive the written arraignment and plea
she mailed him on February 15.
Two days later, the Scott County Attorney filed a trial information
charging Johnson, who had been previously convicted of a felony, with
having dominion or control of a firearm, and Johnson appeared before the
district court for his arraignment. He told the court he had not met with
Kiefer-Garrison about his case and denied ever seeing the written
arraignment Kieffer-Garrison filed on his behalf. Johnson denied signing
the written arraignment and provided the court with three forms of
identification containing his signature.
The court and the assistant county attorney both compared the
signature on the written arraignment with Johnson’s signature on his
financial affidavit and application for appointment of counsel, as well as
the three forms of identification Johnson provided. The court concluded
the signature on the written arraignment had “similarities” to Johnson’s
signature but was “not the same.” At that point, the court informed
Johnson that it was “going to instruct Ms. Kieffer-Garrison that she is to
have face-to-face contact with you” and continued the arraignment until
March 21.
Kieffer-Garrison and Johnson met for the first time at Johnson’s
continued arraignment on March 21. Kieffer-Garrison claimed she did not
have Johnson’s file with her but had reviewed it earlier. She informed the
court that she mailed Johnson a letter and written arraignment form with
a self-addressed envelope. However, as Kieffer-Garrison now stipulates,
she proceeded to make false statements about the written arraignment.
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Kieffer-Garrison falsely told the court that she received Johnson’s
written arraignment form in the mail with what she believed was
Johnson’s signature and filed it. Johnson reiterated to the court that he
had not received any mail from Kieffer-Garrison and neither he nor anyone
else at his direction signed the arraignment. The court ultimately struck
the written arraignment Kieffer-Garrison filed due to “a discrepancy in the
written arraignment,” appointed a new attorney to represent Johnson, and
continued the arraignment again.
On December 13, the Board filed a complaint against Kieffer-
Garrison, alleging she violated numerous rules of professional conduct—
all of which she has been sanctioned for violating in the past—during her
representation of Johnson. The parties entered into a stipulation of facts
on March 12, 2020, and waived the formal hearing. The Board
recommended a one-year suspension of Kieffer-Garrison’s license.
The commission found Kieffer-Garrison violated all five rules of
professional conduct alleged in the Board’s complaint. First, it found she
violated rule 32:1.2(a), requiring a lawyer to abide by the client’s decisions
regarding the objectives of representation, when she failed to communicate
with Johnson about his objectives and waived the preliminary hearing and
his right to a speedy trial without consulting him. Second, the commission
concluded Kieffer-Garrison violated rule 32:1.4(a)(2), which requires a
lawyer to reasonably consult with the client, by waiving Johnson’s
preliminary hearing and right to speedy trial without his knowledge before
she had ever communicated with him. Third, it determined she violated
rule 32:1.4(a)(3), which requires a lawyer to keep the client reasonably
informed, explaining she had only sent Johnson one letter during the five
weeks she represented him and left Johnson without the benefit of counsel
to navigate his early court proceedings. Fourth, the commission found
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Kieffer-Garrison violated rule 32:3.3(a)(1), by which a lawyer shall not
knowingly make a false statement of fact to a tribunal, in multiple ways
based on the false signature of Johnson’s that she filed and the false
information she told the district court. Finally, it concluded Kieffer-
Garrison violated rule 32:8.4(d), which prohibits a lawyer from engaging
in conduct that is prejudicial to the administration of justice, because her
falsified written arraignment caused the court to schedule additional
arraignment hearings in Johnson’s case.
In reaching its recommended sanction, the commission concluded
there were no mitigating factors. However, it found the following
aggravating factors: Kieffer-Garrison’s prior disciplinary action for the
same type of conduct, her experience in practicing law, and her violation
of multiple rules. The commission recommended a one-year suspension
of Kieffer-Garrison’s law license.
II. Standard of Review.
We review attorney disciplinary proceedings de novo. Iowa Supreme
Ct. Att’y Disciplinary Bd. v. Watkins, 944 N.W.2d 881, 887 (Iowa 2020).
The Board must prove the alleged attorney misconduct by a convincing
preponderance of evidence, which is a more demanding standard than
proof by a preponderance of the evidence, but “less demanding than proof
beyond a reasonable doubt.” Iowa Supreme Ct. Att’y Disciplinary Bd. v.
Nine, 920 N.W.2d 825, 827–28 (Iowa 2018) (quoting Iowa Supreme Ct. Att’y
Disciplinary Bd. v. Johnson, 884 N.W.2d 772, 777 (Iowa 2016)). Factual
stipulations bind the parties, and we interpret those stipulations “with
reference to their subject matter and in light of the surrounding
circumstances and the whole record.” Id. at 828 (quoting Johnson, 884
N.W.2d at 777). Finally, we respectfully consider the commission’s
recommended sanction, but we ultimately “have the discretion to ‘impose
8
a greater or lesser sanction than what the commission has recommended
upon proof of an ethical violation.’ ” Iowa Supreme Ct. Att’y Disciplinary
Bd. v. Noel, 923 N.W.2d 575, 582 (Iowa 2019) (quoting Iowa Supreme Ct.
Att’y Disciplinary Bd. v. Mathahs, 918 N.W.2d 487, 489 (Iowa 2018)).
III. Ethical Violations.
The Board alleged, and the commission found, that Kieffer-Garrison
violated the following five Iowa Rules of Professional Conduct: 32:1.2(a),
32:1.4(a)(2), 32:1.4(a)(3), 32:3.3(a)(1), and 32:8.4(d). Despite the
commission’s findings, we still must conduct a de novo review of Kieffer-
Garrison’s alleged ethical violations. Watkins, 944 N.W.2d at 887. Upon
our review, we agree with the commission’s findings.
A. Rule 32:1.2(a): Scope of Representation and Allocation of
Authority Between Client and Lawyer. Rule 32:1.2(a) provides,
[A] lawyer shall abide by a client’s decisions concerning the
objectives of representation and, as required by rule 32:1.4,
shall consult with the client as to the means by which they
are to be pursued. A lawyer may take such action on behalf
of the client as is impliedly authorized to carry out the
representation. . . . In a criminal case, the lawyer shall abide
by the client’s decision, after consultation with the lawyer, as
to a plea to be entered. . . .
Iowa R. Prof’l Conduct 32:1.2(a). Although Kieffer-Garrison was appointed
to represent Johnson on February 13, 2019, she had not met or spoken
with him until March 21. During that period, Kieffer-Garrison waived
Johnson’s preliminary hearing and his right to a speedy trial, and, without
his knowledge or consent, signed his name and filed a written arraignment
and plea of not guilty with his purported signature. Never having
consulted Johnson about any of these actions, Kieffer-Garrison
undoubtedly violated her professional duty to abide by her client’s
decisions concerning the objectives of representation and took
unauthorized action on his behalf. See Iowa Supreme Ct. Att’y Disciplinary
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Bd. v. Schall, 814 N.W.2d 210, 213–14 (Iowa 2012) (holding lawyer violated
rule 32:1.2(a) by altering plea of not guilty form to effect an unauthorized
waiver of right to speedy trial).
B. Rule 32:1.4(a)(2) and (3): Client Communication. Rule
32:1.4(a)(2) requires a lawyer to “reasonably consult with the client about
the means by which the client’s objectives are to be accomplished,” and
rule 32:1.4(a)(3) requires a lawyer to “keep the client reasonably informed
about the status of the matter.” Iowa R. Prof’l Conduct 32:1.4(a)(2)–(3). “A
lawyer’s regular communication with clients will minimize the occasions
on which a client will need to request information concerning the
representation.” Id. r. 32:1.4 cmt. 4. Kieffer-Garrison never consulted
Johnson before waiving his preliminary hearing and right to speedy trial,
nor did she communicate with him to inform him that she had waived his
preliminary hearing. Johnson went to the district court for his preliminary
hearing unaware that Kieffer-Garrison had waived it. We find Kieffer-
Garrison violated rules 32:1.4(a)(2) and (3). See Iowa Supreme Ct. Att’y
Disciplinary Bd. v. Turner, 918 N.W.2d 130, 145 (Iowa 2018) (finding an
attorney violated rules 32:1.4(a)(2) and (3) when he did not communicate
information to his clients that left them unaware he would not represent
them at hearings and failed to inform clients of court hearings).
C. Rule 32:3.3(a)(1): Candor Toward the Tribunal. Rule
32:3.3(a)(1) prohibits a lawyer from “knowingly” making “a false statement
of fact or law to a tribunal or fail[ing] to correct a false statement of material
fact . . . previously made.” Iowa R. Prof’l Conduct 32:3.3(a)(1). The rules
define “knowingly” as “actual knowledge of the fact in question” and can
“be inferred from circumstances.” Iowa R. Prof’l Conduct 32:1.0(f). Kieffer-
Garrison falsified Johnson’s name to the written arraignment form waiving
10
his right to a speedy trial without ever consulting with Johnson, thereby
misrepresenting the form’s authenticity in a legal proceeding.
She then proceeded to make statements to the district court that
she knew were untrue. As she stipulates, she falsely told the district court
that she had received the written arraignment form in the mail with what
she believed was Johnson’s signature and filed it. Based on this conduct,
we conclude Kieffer-Garrison violated rule 32:3.3(a)(1). See Iowa Supreme
Ct. Att’y Disciplinary Bd. v. McGinness, 844 N.W.2d 456, 462–63 (Iowa
2014) (concluding a lawyer violated rule 32:3.3(a)(1) when he falsified
certificates of service on discovery requests and made statements to the
district court that the certificates were legitimate).
D. Rule 32:8.4(d): Conduct Prejudicial to the Administration of
Justice. Under rule 32:8.4(d), it is professional misconduct for an
attorney to “engage in conduct that is prejudicial to the administration of
justice.” Iowa R. Prof’l Conduct 32:8.4(d). “Violations of this rule impede
the efficient operation of the courts and waste judicial resources.” Kieffer-
Garrison, 847 N.W.2d at 495. Kieffer-Garrison’s conduct was prejudicial
to the administration of justice because it required the court to waste
judicial resources in scheduling additional arraignment hearings for
Johnson. See id. (finding “Kieffer-Garrison’s conduct was, by a convincing
preponderance of the evidence, prejudicial to the administration of justice
because it caused the court to waste judicial resources in addressing a
motion falsely asserting she filed an application for further review”).
IV. Sanction.
We examine a number of factors in our fact-based analysis to
determine the appropriate sanction, including “the nature of the
violations, protection of the public, deterrence of similar misconduct by
others, the lawyer’s fitness to practice, and [our] duty to uphold the
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integrity of the profession in the eyes of the public.” Watkins, 944 N.W.2d
at 888 (alteration in original) (emphasis omitted) (quoting Iowa Supreme
Ct. Att’y Disciplinary Bd. v. Stansberry, 922 N.W.2d 591, 598 (Iowa 2019)).
We also consider any mitigating and aggravating circumstances. Id. at
888–89. We strive to “maintain[] some degree of uniformity throughout
our disciplinary cases,” but the facts of each case ultimately guide the
sanction. Iowa Supreme Ct. Att’y Disciplinary Bd. v. Barry, 908 N.W.2d
217, 227 (Iowa 2018).
The commission and the Board both recommended one-year
suspensions of Kieffer-Garrison’s license. “We give the commission’s
recommendation respectful consideration, but may impose a greater or
lesser sanction.” Turner, 918 N.W.2d at 152 (quoting Iowa Supreme Ct.
Att’y Disciplinary Bd. v. Morse, 887 N.W.2d 131, 143 (Iowa 2016)). Notably,
it is easier for our court to consider the commission’s recommendation
when the commission provides legal authority supporting its
recommendation. Here, the commission provided legal authority
supporting its findings that Kieffer-Garrison violated the aforementioned
rules, but it only provided a few generic statements of legal authority
without explaining how these statements applied or how it arrived at its
recommended sanction in this case.
Kieffer-Garrison’s decision to misrepresent that her client signed the
written arraignment form and plea of not guilty alone “is a ‘grave and
serious breach of professional ethics.’ ” Iowa Supreme Ct. Att’y
Disciplinary Bd. v. Kallsen, 814 N.W.2d 233, 239 (Iowa 2012) (quoting Iowa
Supreme Ct. Att’y Disciplinary Bd. v. Rickabaugh, 728 N.W.2d 375, 382
(Iowa 2007)). “[U]nquestioned honesty of attorneys dealing with judges” is
crucial to “[t]he integrity of our legal system.” Id. (quoting Comm. on Pro.
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Ethics & Conduct v. Seff, 457 N.W.2d 924, 927 (Iowa 1990)). As we have
stressed in our past attorney disciplinary cases and reiterate again today,
[f]undamental honesty is the base line and mandatory
requirement to serve in the legal profession. The whole
structure of ethical standards is derived from the paramount
need for lawyers to be trustworthy. The court system and the
public we serve are damaged when our officers play fast and
loose with the truth.
Id. (alteration in original) (quoting Rickabaugh, 728 N.W.2d at 382).
We subject attorneys who actively disregard this fundamental
baseline “to substantial sanctions ranging from permanent disbarment to
six-month license suspensions.” Id. For instance, we disbarred an
attorney in Iowa Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary Board v. Rickabaugh
for multiple misrepresentations, including forging the executor’s name on
a probate report submitted to the court, after he had previously been
submitted for forging a judge’s signature to persuade a client that he had
filed a lawsuit. 728 N.W.2d at 378, 382. In Iowa Supreme Court Attorney
Disciplinary Board v. Kallsen, we suspended an attorney’s license for one
year after he violated four of our ethical rules—including rules 32:1.2(a),
32:3.3(a)(1), and 32:8.4(d), which Kieffer-Garrison also violated in this
case—when he forged a guilty plea with the district court resulting in his
client serving a seven-day jail sentence. 814 N.W.2d at 239–40. That
attorney had only been disciplined once before, and that prior disciplinary
action did not involve the same type of misconduct. Id. at 240.
We suspended Kieffer-Garrison’s license to practice law with no
possibility of reinstatement for six months in 2014, in part due to her
dishonesty. Kieffer-Garrison, 847 N.W.2d at 496. There, she falsely
represented to her client and the clerk of this court that she had timely
filed an application for further review in a postconviction appeal by mail,
as well as “repeatedly missed appellate deadlines in several criminal cases,
13
received twenty default notices as a consequence of those missed
deadlines, [and] failed to pay resulting penalties in a timely fashion over a
period of two years.” Id. at 491–92. That case presented a mitigating factor
in the form of Kieffer-Garrison’s depression and pursuit of treatment for
it. Id. at 496. In this case, Kieffer-Garrison has not presented any
evidence suggesting she was suffering depression at the time of her
actions, and we will not speculate as to whether depression or any other
life circumstances contributed to her behavior in this case such that we
would consider it a mitigating factor.
Kieffer-Garrison’s misconduct does not rise to the level of
misconduct present in Rickabaugh, where an attorney with a history of
disciplinary action committed multiple forgeries, including the forgery of a
judge’s signature. 728 N.W.2d at 377–78, 382. On the other hand, the
consequences of her misconduct on her client were not as severe as the
seven-day jail sentence that the client suffered in Kallsen when his
attorney forged the client’s guilty plea with the district court. 814 N.W.2d
at 239–40. The severity of the consequences notwithstanding, the
circumstances in this case are still just as troubling as those that led to a
one-year suspension in Kallsen in light of Kieffer-Garrison’s disciplinary
record.
Unlike Kallsen, who had only faced disciplinary action once before
in the form of a three-month suspension for neglect, Kieffer-Garrison has
a lengthy disciplinary record that includes various sanctions for
misconduct similar to her misconduct in this case. Id. at 237. Thus, we
would likely give an attorney with a less substantial disciplinary record a
lesser sanction than the one-year suspension in Kallsen for committing
the misconduct at issue in this case because it did not result in a jail
sentence for the client. But, we already suspended Kieffer-Garrison’s
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license in the past for six months for the sort of dishonest behavior she
displayed in this case, and it clearly did not deter her from committing it
again on multiple occasions. Kieffer-Garrison continues to violate our
ethical rules by engaging in dishonest behavior that casts doubt on the
integrity of our system, and her behavior warrants a strong sanction to
protect the public and our profession.
“Normally, a pattern of misconduct gives rise to enhanced
sanctions,” Kieffer-Garrison, 847 N.W.2d at 496 (quoting Iowa Supreme Ct.
Bd. of Pro. Ethics & Conduct v. Gallner, 621 N.W.2d 183, 187 (Iowa 2001)
(en banc)), as does a case “involve[ing] multiple rule violations,” Iowa
Supreme Ct. Att’y Disciplinary Bd. v. Parrish, 925 N.W.2d 163, 181 (Iowa
2019). Similarly, “[p]rior disciplinary action is a significant aggravating
factor. ‘This is particularly true when the current rule violations involve
the same type of conduct as the prior conduct subject to discipline.’ ”
Barry, 908 N.W.2d at 234 (citation omitted) (quoting Iowa Supreme Ct.
Att’y Disciplinary Bd. v. Weiland, 885 N.W.2d 198, 215 (Iowa 2016)).
Kieffer-Garrison has previously been sanctioned for violating every rule
that she violated in this case.
When we suspended Kieffer-Garrison’s license for six months in
2014 for her dishonesty, we noted her “persistent perpetuation of a
falsehood [was] a ‘remarkable aggravating factor.’ ” Kieffer-Garrison, 847
N.W.2d at 496 (quoting McGinness, 844 N.W.2d at 466). Kieffer-Garrison’s
“persistent perpetuation of a falsehood” in this case is all the more
remarkable as she was sanctioned again in 2017 for another act of
dishonesty when she cut out her client’s signature from a court document
and attempted to attach the cutout signature to a required pretrial
conference form in front of a court attendant. Id. Despite receiving
multiple sanctions already for rules violations involving dishonesty,
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Kieffer-Garrison violated our rules yet again through her dishonest acts in
her representation of Johnson in this case.
Kieffer-Garrison violated multiple rules involving dishonesty by
falsifying her client’s signature on the written arraignment form and plea
of not guilty that she filed with the district court, misrepresenting her
client’s decisions when she had never actually spoken to him. Rather than
owning up to this misconduct, she attempted to cover it up through more
dishonesty by falsely telling the district court that she had received
Johnson’s written arraignment form in the mail with what she believed
was Johnson’s signature and filed it. Kieffer-Garrison’s violations “were
serial acts of misconduct, rather than an isolated misadventure.” Id. Her
“pattern of deceit reveals a serious character flaw.” Rickabaugh, 728
N.W.2d at 382. We consider her pattern of misconduct, multiple rules
violations, and history of disciplinary action as aggravating factors.
Kieffer-Garrison’s “substantial experience in the practice of law is
another aggravating factor in imposing discipline.” Parrish, 925 N.W.2d at
181. She has practiced law in Iowa for approximately eighteen years and
is “not a new practitioner unfamiliar with our ethical rules.” Id.
“Knowingly violating our ethical rules is [also] an aggravating
circumstance.” Id. Here, Kieffer-Garrison knew Johnson had not signed
the written arraignment form and plea of not guilty, as she stipulates now
that she had never communicated with him prior to filing the form and
falsely told the district court she had received the written arraignment
form with the plea in the mail with what she believed was Johnson’s
signature.
There is no indication in the record that Kieffer-Garrison has any
remorse for this misconduct, which is also an aggravating factor. Id. at
182 (noting “showing no remorse is an aggravating factor”). It is alarming
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that Kieffer-Garrison continues to violate our ethical rules despite the
lengthy nature of her disciplinary record over the past ten years. Her
apparent “lack of remorse is a powerful aggravating factor in this case
because a major role of our disciplinary system is to protect the public
from overreaching and unethical lawyers.” Id.
The only mitigating factor Kieffer-Garrison proposed in her
stipulation was her “[c]ooperative attitude toward the proceedings.”
However, the commission rejected this consideration and found no
mitigating factors, noting Kieffer-Garrison “did not even file a brief in this
matter.” We agree with the commission that no mitigating factors are
present.
Overall, given the nature of Kieffer-Garrison’s violations and the
number of aggravating factors in this case, the public in general and the
legal profession in particular will be best served through a lengthy
suspension. “More than anything, [her] obvious indifferent attitude
toward our disciplinary system and basic professional norms and [her]
persistent history of disciplinary problems weigh heavily in the sanctions
scale.” Id. Accordingly, we suspend Kieffer-Garrison from the practice of
law indefinitely with no possibility of reinstatement for one year from the
date of this opinion.
V. Disposition.
We suspend Kieffer-Garrison from the practice of law without the
possibility of reinstatement for one year. This suspension applies to all
facets of the practice of law as provided in Iowa Court Rule 34.23(3), and
Kieffer-Garrison must notify all clients as outlined in Iowa Court Rule
34.24(1). We tax the costs of this action to Kieffer-Garrison in accordance
with Iowa Court Rule 36.24(1).
LICENSE SUSPENDED.