This matter arises from a Report of the Committee on Character that Roger Peterman be certified for admission to the bar of this state. One member of the committee panel that heard the matter dissented. That member believed that Peterman’s admission to the bar was precluded by this Court’s decision in In re Wilson, 81 N.J. 451, 409 A.2d 1153 (1979). As a young lawyer in Pennsylvania, Peterman had misappropriated the proceeds of all or part of three insurance checks intended as medical reimbursement payments for a physician who had treated, at Peterman’s request, a client in a personal-injury case.
I
In re Wilson was decided on December 19, 1979. In that case the Court held that a knowing misappropriation of clients’ funds will almost invariably warrant disbarment of the attorney. Some months before that decision, on August 9, 1979, the Keystone Insurance Company of Pennsylvania mailed a check to Mr. Peter-man in the amount of $479.31, payable to Ernest McCain, Peter-*203man’s client in the personal injury case. McCain endorsed the check and went with Peterman to a bank where the check was cashed. Peterman either deposited these proceeds into an account over which he had signature authority or retained them as cash.
After the Wilson decision, on March 21,1980, Keystone issued a second check in the amount of $149.64, again payable to McCain. McCain endorsed the check and Peterman deposited it in an account that he held jointly with his wife. Finally, on May 21, 1980, Keystone issued a third check in the amount of $996.97, jointly to Ernest McCain and Dr. Richard Kaplan, the physician who had treated McCain at Peterman’s request. McCain endorsed the check. Peterman then signed Dr. Kaplan’s name to it and deposited it in the joint account, retaining some cash.
In his testimony before the Committee on Character, Peterman described the harrowing circumstances under which his final wrong occurred. He said:
Yes, I even remember that day. In this case, I specifically remember the day. It was a terrible day. I had — my car was no longer running and I received the check and I walked to my office, which is about — I didn’t have money for the bus and I walked about two miles into Center City Philadelphia and had already called Mr. McCain and arranged to meet him there to obtain his endorsement. I remember that I was barely able to make it. Physically I was so drained and debilitated that I was — had a hard time getting there to the site where I met Mr. McCain.
He described his conversation with Mr. McCain about the status of the personal injury case and how, after that meeting, he went from the office and walked into an area of North Philadelphia frequented by drug users and drug dealers. He stopped at an automatic-teller machine where he deposited the check by signing Dr. Kaplan’s name and putting the check into the machine, from which he was able to withdraw $200 in cash. He said that he could not “say exactly what I was thinking about. I was probably thinking that I was excruciatingly ill and I hate to be unnecessarily graphic.” He described his feeling of disgust and his loss of control of his bowels, testifying that he
just remember[ed] being so humiliated completely, completely destroyed emotionally. You know, looking back on it and I don’t want to sound too absurd, but I *204mean, looking back on it I’m convinced now that I believed at the time that I was authorized — that I believed in my demented thinking with my addictive process at work, that I believed that I was authorized to sign his name because I was going to pay him in any case, and that I had an account with him. I had an independent contractual obligation to pay him.
While the Disciplinary Review Board of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania did not credit Peterman’s testimony that he believed that he was authorized to sign Dr. Kaplan’s name, the fact remains that Peterman had arranged for the medical treatment and had, according to his testimony, guaranteed the payment of Dr. Kaplan’s bills.
Despite what he claims was his intention, he never made the payments to Dr. Kaplan, who complained to the Philadelphia Prosecutor’s Office, which brought criminal proceedings against Peterman. A jury convicted Peterman of two misdemeanor counts of failure to make required disposition of funds received, but acquitted him of forgery. On July 13,1984, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court suspended him from practice as a result of the criminal conviction. He was disbarred in Pennsylvania on September 23, 1985.
Peterman was reinstated to practice in Pennsylvania on August 21, 1991. He passed the February 1992 administrations of both the New Jersey and New York Bar Examinations. On June 23, 1992, he was admitted to the bar of the State of New York.
The New Jersey Supreme Court Committee on Character held hearings and subsequently issued a Report and Recommendation certifying Peterman’s fitness to practice law. We entered an Order to Show Cause why he should be certified for admission to the bar of this state.
II
The standards for evaluating the fitness of a bar applicant to practice law are well settled. This Court has consistently required applicants seeking bar admission to possess good moral character. See, e.g., In re Jenkins, 94 N.J. 458, 466-67, 467 A.2d *2051084 (1983); In re Matthews, 94 N.J. 59, 75-78, 462 A.2d 165 (1983). Although we acknowledge that the concept of “good moral character” is susceptible to different definitions, we have determined that the “fitness requirement * * * be formulated in terms of the qualities of character attorneys must possess to fulfill their obligations to individual clients and to the judicial process.” Jenkins, supra, 94 N.J. at 467, 467 A.2d 1084 (citing Matthews, supra, 94 N.J. at 77, 462 A.2d 165). We emphasized in Matthews that “a bar applicant must possess a certain set of traits — honesty and truthfulness, trustworthiness and reliability, and a professional commitment to the judicial process and the administration of justice. These personal characteristics are required to ensure that lawyers will serve both their clients and the administration of justice honorably and responsibly.” 94 N.J. at 77, 462 A.2d 165.
Thus, an applicant’s appreciation for the importance of honesty and candor is an indispensable ingredient of a finding of fitness to practice law in New Jersey. At the same time, we have recognized that evidence of reform and rehabilitation is relevant to determine an applicant’s fitness to practice law. Matthews, supra, 94 N.J. 59, 462 A.2d 165, involved a finding of investment fraud prior to application for admission to the bar, and Jenkins, supra, 94 N.J. 458, 467 A.2d 1084, involved non-disclosure of theft and embezzlement charges. In each case, we recognized that behavior subsequent to an applicant’s disqualifying actions that clearly and convincingly demonstrates rehabilitation may support a finding of present fitness. We set forth in Matthews the evidence that may be found to be probative of reform and rehabilitation. Application of these principles to the unique facts of this case results in our concurrence with the statewide panel’s conclusion that respondent has demonstrated present fitness to practice law.
Although Peterman’s prior criminal history raises serious concerns about his fitness to practice law, we conclude that the record establishes that respondent’s attitude and behavior subsequent to those acts demonstrate personal reform and rehabilitation.
*206There is more than enough evidence in this case to sustain the panel’s finding of rehabilitation. A regrettable victim of drug use since his college days, Peterman was involved in a severe car accident shortly after he entered Rutgers Law School, resulting in extensive burns and fractures and treatment with morphine and other pain-killing drugs. He remained dependent on drugs throughout law school and the early years of practice. After a brief stint in public employment, he established his own practice in 1978, at which time he handled Mr. McCain’s case.
Like so many others who come before us, it was not until he hit bottom after the McCain case that Peterman began his uphill climb. He has since demonstrated recovery by attendance at Alcoholics Anonymous, Narcotics Anonymous, and Lawyers Concerned With Lawyers. He has successfully turned his life around with a new marriage and with steady employment in the public sector as a youth-services worker. He has long since made full restitution to Dr. Kaplan. He has, as well, been involved in school-board activities, and in 1992 was appointed to the Drug and Alcohol Abuse Committee of the New Jersey State Bar Association. A witness at the hearing before the committee panel described “a man who has really been worthless turn out to be a terrific individual.” Another said that she would “have no reservations at all” about recommending Roger Peterman, despite knowing of his personal problems. Others described his reputation for truth and veracity as “excellent”; “a very, very honest man”; “one of the highest degrees of commitment to recovery”; “I would trust Roger with any important decision that I had to make in my life.”
Experts in the fields of addiction are convinced of his rehabilitation: “He’s done a reversal and his commitment to recovery is impressive”; “misappropriation of funds was not a part of Peter-man’s character but a product of his addiction.”
Based upon these factors, the panel concluded that Peterman has made a remarkable recovery from his addiction; his marriage *207is stable and supportive; he is active in the community; and he has demonstrated rehabilitation.
III
What concerns us most, and obviously gave the most concern to the panel, is the relevance of our decision in In re Wilson to the admission process. We agree with the premise that one who as an attorney steals clients’ funds in another jurisdiction forfeits the right to practice law in New Jersey whether the offense occurs while the attorney is a member of the New Jersey bar or before the attorney has become a member of this bar. There are some acts of misconduct that demonstrate an irredeemable absence of the character and integrity necessary to the practice of law in New Jersey. In so ruling, we do not seek to export the Wilson doctrine; rather, we seek only to import into our legal community that set of values that we deem essential to the practice of law. There is no unfairness in expecting attorneys, wherever they practice, to recognize the character blemish implicit in stealing client funds. Where we differ from other jurisdictions is in assessing the loss of public confidence that arises when such an offender is reinstated to practice.
This case does not fit precisely, however, within the Wilson mold and there are several features to the case that temper the inexorable application of that rule. Unlike the criminal conviction in In re Iulo, 115 N.J. 498, 559 A.2d 1349 (1989), Peterman’s Pennsylvania criminal conviction did not conclusively establish that Peterman had knowingly misappropriated client funds because Dr. Kaplan, not Ernest McCain, was the complainant in those proceedings.
It is clear from the record that these funds were never intended to be distributed to the client, Ernest McCain. It was understood by all parties that the funds were intended for Dr. Kaplan. Peterman thus relies upon our decision in In re Hollendonner, 102 N.J. 21, 504 A.2d 1174 (1985), in which we declined to disbar an attorney found to have used escrow funds without the permission *208of one of the parties having an interest in the funds. Two reasons were given for imposing a lesser discipline: (1) an absence of clear and convincing evidence that respondent invaded the escrow funds with knowledge that the use of the funds was improper, and (2) that this was the first occasion on which we had addressed the near identity of escrow funds and trust funds. In re Hollendonner, supra, 102 N.J. at 29, 504 A.2d 1174.
Although this case is not on all fours with Hollendonner (Hollendonner had his client’s consent to use the funds), an application of Wilson to this case would presuppose that an attorney practicing in New Jersey in 1980, who had engaged in the same misconduct as Peterman, would have been subject to disbarment. In In re Goldstein, 116 N.J. 1, 560 A.2d 1166 (1989), we declined to disbar an attorney who had taken the interest on clients’ funds because the issue of misappropriation of the interest earned on trust funds rather than the principal itself had never been addressed by the Court in the disciplinary context. As with Hollendonner, where the Court clarified the identical nature of escrow and trust funds, “the situation require[d] more direct notice to the bar of the impact of misappropriation of the interest earned on trust funds before severe penalties [were] imposed for this improper conduct.” Goldstein, supra, 116 N.J. at 6, 560 A.2d 1166. In In re Reman, 118 N.J. 361, 365, 571 A.2d 1282 (1990), an attorney “received the [misused] funds for the purpose of paying * * * outstanding medical bills.” However, we found there an absence of an “independent, antecedent duty,” id. at 367, 571 A.2d 1282, to satisfy the medical bills out of the proceeds. That distinction is not present here because the check for the proceeds was payable to both the client and doctor.
One of the abiding justifications for the Wilson rule is “the fact that the offense is clear and well understood, both by the lawyer and by the public, and universally regarded as irredeemable.” In re Ronopka, 126 N.J. 225, 233, 596 A.2d 733 (1991). Peterman’s conduct, then, should be judged as would that of a New Jersey attorney in 1980. The point is not that we expect attorneys *209outside of New Jersey to be familiar with our disciplinary rules, but rather that we expect attorneys outside of New Jersey to appreciate the universal failure of professional integrity involved in the Wilson offense. These facts fell one step short of a Wilson offense as it was understood in 1980. It is not as clear to us as it is to our dissenting member that a knowing misuse of non-client funds in 1980 would have invariably warranted disbarment. For example, in In re Farr, 115 N.J. 231, 557 A.2d 1373 (1989), the Court declined to disbar a public prosecutor who had misused public property.
IV
Abuse of the trust in which clients’ funds are held has always been regarded as particularly reprehensible. “[T]here are few more egregious acts of professional misconduct of which an attorney can be guilty than misappropriation of a client’s funds held in trust.” In re Beckmann, 79 N.J. 402, 404-05, 400 A.2d 792 (1979). We will deny admission to the bar of the State of New Jersey to an attorney from another jurisdiction who has knowingly misappropriated clients’ funds even though that jurisdiction may regard that attorney as fully rehabilitated and the attorney may be admitted to practice in other jurisdictions as well. We regard entrusted funds as client funds.
Roger Peterman’s appropriation of the proceeds of the Keystone checks took place in 1979 and early 1980. The Wilson case was decided on December 19, 1979. Even after that date, variations on the clear theft of client trust funds did not invariably result in disbarment. The sequential congruity of these events with our Wilson decision and the fact that the funds in question were not clearly client trust funds at the date thereof tempers the application of the Wilson rule.
The certification of fitness to practice issued by the Committee on Character is affirmed.