Legal Research AI

In Re Hamm

Court: Arizona Supreme Court
Date filed: 2005-12-07
Citations: 123 P.3d 652, 211 Ariz. 458
Copy Citations
6 Citing Cases
Combined Opinion
                       SUPREME COURT OF ARIZONA
                             En Banc


In the Matter of                 )   Arizona Supreme Court
                                 )   No. SB-04-0079-M
JAMES JOSEPH HAMM,               )
                                 )   O P I N I O N
___________________    Applicant.)


                        APPLICATION DENIED
_________________________________________________________________
JAMES JOSEPH HAMM                                           Tempe
In Propria Persona

MONROE & McDONOUGH, P.C.                                      Tucson
     By   Lawrence McDonough
And
JUAN PEREZ-MEDRANO, Chair                                    Phoenix
Attorneys for the Committee on Character & Fitness

CHARLES W. WIRKEN, President                                 Phoenix
HELEN PERRY GRIMWOOD, President-elect                        Phoenix
JIM D. SMITH, First Vice President                           Phoenix
DANIEL J. McAULIFFE, Second Vice President                   Phoenix
EDWARD F. NOVAK, Secretary-Treasurer                         Phoenix
ROBERT B. VAN WYCK, Chief Bar Counsel                        Phoenix
Attorneys for Amicus Curiae
State Bar of Arizona

MICHAEL D. KIMERER                                           Phoenix
MARTY LIEBERMAN                                              Phoenix
AMY L. NGUYEN                                                Phoenix
CARLA RYAN                                                    Tucson
ANDREW SILVERMAN                                              Tucson
Attorneys for Amicus Curiae
Arizona Attorneys for Criminal Justice

ANDREW P. THOMAS, MARICOPA COUNTY ATTORNEY                Phoenix
     By   Andrew P. Thomas
Attorney for Amicus Curiae Maricopa County Attorney’s Office
_________________________________________________________________

M c G R E G O R, Chief Justice

¶1        James Hamm petitioned this Court, pursuant to Arizona
Supreme   Court     Rule     36(g),      17A     A.R.S.,1       to     review       the

recommendation of the Committee on Character and Fitness (the

Committee) that his application for admission to the State Bar

of Arizona (the Bar) be denied.               Having reviewed the record and

the Committee’s report, we conclude that James Hamm has failed

to establish the good moral character necessary to be admitted

to the practice of law in Arizona and deny his application.

                                         I.

¶2         In September 1974, James Hamm was twenty-six years old

and living on the streets of Tucson.              Although he previously had

attended divinity school and worked as a part-time pastor, Hamm

describes his life in 1974 as reflecting a series of personal and

social failures.     In 1973, he had separated from his wife, with

whom he had a son.           Although he had no criminal record, he

supported himself by selling small quantities of marijuana and,

again according to Hamm, he used marijuana and other drugs and

abused alcohol.

¶3         On    September   6,    1974,       Hamm    met    two    young    men   who

identified themselves as college students from Missouri.                            The

two,   Willard   Morley    and    Zane   Staples,      came    to    Tucson    to   buy

twenty pounds of marijuana.          Hamm agreed to sell it to them, but

apparently   was   unable    to    acquire      that    quantity      of   marijuana.


1
      References in this opinion to “Rule ___” are to the Rules
of the Arizona Supreme Court.


                                         2
Rather than call off the transaction, Hamm and two accomplices,

Garland Wells and Bill Reeser, agreed to rob Staples and Morley

of the money intended for the purchase.             On September 7, Wells

gave Hamm a gun to use during the robbery.              Later that day, Wells

and Hamm directed Morley and Staples to drive to the outskirts of

Tucson,   purportedly    to   complete     the   drug    transaction;    Reeser

followed in another vehicle.           Both Wells and Hamm carried guns;

Morley and Staples were unarmed.             Hamm sat behind Morley, the

driver,   and   Wells   sat   behind    Staples.        At   some   point,    Hamm

detected that Staples was becoming suspicious.               As Morley stopped

the car, and without making any demand on the victims for money,

Hamm shot Morley in the back of the head, killing him.                   At the

same time, Wells shot Staples.             Hamm then shot Staples in the

back as he tried to escape and shot Morley once again.                       Wells

also shot Morley, then pursued Staples, whom he ultimately killed

outside of the car.      Hamm and Wells took $1400.00 from the glove

compartment, fled the scene in the van driven by Reeser, and left

the bodies of Morley and Staples lying in the desert.

¶4         Hamm took his share of the money and visited his sister

in California.     At the hearing held to consider his application

to the Bar, he told the Committee that he “was compelled to come

back to Tucson,” despite knowing he probably would be caught.

Police officers arrested Hamm shortly after his return.                While in

custody, he told the police that Morley and Staples were killed


                                       3
in a gun battle during the drug deal.                        Initially charged with two

counts of first-degree murder and two counts of armed robbery,

Hamm pled guilty to one count of first-degree murder and was

sentenced to life in prison, with no possibility of parole for

twenty-five years.

¶5            Once    in     prison,          Hamm        began    taking          steps       toward

rehabilitation and became a model prisoner.                                 After spending one

year in maximum security, he applied for and received a job in a

computer training program that allowed him to be transferred to

medium security.            Once in medium security, Hamm apparently took

advantage of any and every educational opportunity the prison

system   had    to    offer.        He    completed          certificates           in    yoga    and

meditation     and,     on    his    own,      studied       Jungian          psychology.          He

helped   fellow       inmates       learn      to    read        and    write      and     to    take

responsibility        for    their       actions.           He    obtained         a     bachelor’s

degree   in    applied       sociology,         summa       cum    laude,       from       Northern

Arizona University through a prison study program.

¶6            After    Hamm    completed            six    years       in    medium       security,

prison officials transferred him to minimum security, where he

worked   on     paint        and    construction            crews.            He       received     a

significant degree of freedom, which allowed him to live in a

dormitory      rather       than    in    a    cell        and    occasionally            to    drive

unaccompanied to nearby towns.                  He testified that he was the only

inmate permitted to head a work crew.                              Hamm reported to the


                                                4
Committee that he played an instrumental role on various prison

committees,    particularly        the    committee     that     developed    a   new

grievance procedure within the Department of Corrections.                          In

addition, he wrote grant proposals for libraries, for handicapped

prisoners,     and     for    obtaining       greater   legal     assistance      for

prisoners.

¶7           While in prison, he met and married Donna Leone.                     She

and Hamm founded Middle Ground Prison Reform (Middle Ground), a

prisoner and prisoner family advocacy organization involved in

lobbying for laws related to the criminal justice system and

prisons.      Middle      Ground   also   provides      public    education    about

those topics.

¶8           In 1989, the Governor, acting on the recommendation of

the Arizona Board of Pardons and Parole (the Board), commuted

Hamm’s sentence.          When he had served nearly seventeen years, in

July 1992, the Board released Hamm on parole, conditioned upon no

use of alcohol or drugs, drug and alcohol testing, and fifteen

hours of community service each month.                   In December 2001, the

Arizona    Board     of      Executive    Clemency2     granted     Hamm’s     third

application for absolute discharge.

¶9           Between his release in August 1992 and his absolute

discharge in December 2001, Hamm performed thousands of hours of


2
      The Board of Pardons and Paroles is now the Arizona Board
of Executive Clemency. 1993 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 255, § 64.


                                          5
community service.            He advocated for prisoners’ rights in various

forums by writing position papers, appearing on radio programs,

testifying    in     legislative        hearings,       and    speaking   at    churches,

schools, and civic organizations.                   He also appeared in a public

service video encouraging children not to do drugs or join gangs.

Hamm now works as the Director of Advocacy Services at Middle

Ground Prison Reform.

¶10          While on parole, Hamm graduated from the Arizona State

University College of Law.              In July 1999, Hamm passed the Arizona

bar examination and, in 2004, filed his Character and Fitness

Report with the Committee.

                                           II.

¶11          The Rules of the Supreme Court of Arizona establish the

process   through        which    the    Committee       and    this    Court   evaluate

applications       for    admission      to       the   Bar,    and    prior    case   law

clarifies the burden an applicant must satisfy to establish good

moral character.         We begin with a review of the rules.

                                           A.

¶12          Rules       34    through    37       define      the    requirements     for

admission to the Bar.3            The Committee may recommend an applicant

for admission only if that applicant, in addition to meeting

3
      Amendments to Rules 32 through 40 became effective December
1, 2005. Order Amending Rules 32-40, 46, 62, 64 & 65, Rules of
Supreme Ct., Ariz. Sup. Ct. No. R-04-0032 (June 9, 2005).      In




                                              6
other requirements, satisfies the Committee that he or she is of

good   moral    character.    Rule   34(a).     The   applicant      bears   the

burden of establishing his or her good moral character.                  In re

Greenberg, 126 Ariz. 290, 292, 614 P.2d 832, 834 (1980) (citing

In re Levine, 97 Ariz. 88, 397 P.2d 205 (1964)).            In determining

whether an applicant’s prior conduct indicates a lack of good

moral character, the Committee must consider the following non-

exhaustive list of factors:

           A.   The applicant’s age, experience and general
                level of sophistication at the time of the
                conduct
           B.   The recency of the conduct
           C.   The reliability of the information concerning
                the conduct
           D.   The seriousness of the conduct
           E.   Consideration given by the applicant to relevant
                laws, rules and responsibilities at the time of
                the conduct
           F.   The factors underlying the conduct
           G.   The cumulative effect of the conduct
           H.   The evidence of rehabilitation
           I.   The applicant’s positive social contributions
                since the conduct
           J.   The applicant’s candor in the admissions process
           K.   The materiality of any omissions or
                misrepresentations by the applicant.

Rule 36(a)3.

¶13         When prior conduct involves the commission of a violent

crime,   the    Committee    must,   at   a   minimum,   hold   an    informal

hearing.    Rule 36(a)4.E.     If three or more Committee members who

attended the hearing or who have read the entire record do not

________________________
this opinion, we refer to the Rules effective when Hamm filed his


                                      7
recommend admission of an applicant, the Committee must hold a

formal hearing to consider whether to recommend the applicant for

admission to the Bar.          Id.

¶14        If the applicant fails to convince the Committee of his

or her good moral character, the Committee has a duty not to

recommend that person to this Court.                  In re Klahr, 102 Ariz. 529,

531, 433 P.2d 977, 979 (1967); Levine, 97 Ariz. at 91, 397 P.2d

at 207 (“If the proof of good moral character falls short of

convincing the Committee on Examinations and Admissions, it is

its duty not to recommend admission.”); In re Courtney, 83 Ariz.

231,   233,     319    P.2d     991,    993       (1957)    (“In    this   it   has    no

discretion; if the members entertain any reservations whatsoever

as to the applicant’s good moral character, it should not make a

favorable recommendation to this court.”).                      After the Committee

submits   its    report,       an   aggrieved       applicant      may   petition     this

Court for review.        Rule 36(g).

                                          B.

¶15        This Court then independently determines whether the

applicant possesses good moral character and, based upon that

determination,        grants    or     denies      the     candidate’s     application.

Although we give serious consideration to the facts as found by

and the recommendation of the Committee, “[t]he ultimate decision

in this difficult matter rests with the Supreme Court.”                             In re

________________________
application for admission to the practice of law.

                                              8
Kiser, 107 Ariz. 326, 327, 487 P.2d 393, 394 (1971) (holding

applicant possessed good moral character); see also Levine, 97

Ariz. at 92, 397 P.2d at 207 (holding the Court must, “using our

independent   judgment,      de     novo   determine    whether     the    necessary

qualifications   have        been    shown”).          We   do   not      limit   our

independent   review    to    matters      of   law;   we   have    “the    ultimate

responsibility for determination of fact and law.”                  In re Ronwin,

139 Ariz. 576, 579, 680 P.2d 107, 110 (1983); see also In re

Walker, 112 Ariz. 134, 137, 539 P.2d 891, 894 (1975) (making a

finding   regarding    the     credibility       of    testimony,      although   in

agreement with the Committee).

¶16        The ultimate question in cases such as this is whether

the applicant has established good moral character, a concept

with which we have wrestled as we have attempted to define its

boundaries.   Greenberg, 126 Ariz. at 292, 614 P.2d at 834.                       As

Hamm asserts, the rules and standards governing admission to the

practice of law in Arizona include no per se disqualifications.

Instead, we consider each case on its own merits.                           Id.    In

Walker, we described the principles on which we rely as follows:

      ‘Upright character’ * * * is something more than an
      absence of bad character. * * * It means that he [an
      applicant for admission] must have conducted himself as
      a man of upright character ordinarily would, should, or
      does. Such character expresses itself not in negatives
      nor in following the line of least resistance, but
      quite often in the will to do the unpleasant thing if
      it is right, and the resolve not to do the pleasant
      thing if it is wrong.


                                           9
112    Ariz.    at    138,   539   P.2d    at    895   (alteration    in   original)

(quoting In re Farmer, 131 S.E. 661, 663 (N.C. 1926)).

¶17            We also agree with Hamm that, under the Rule applicable

to Hamm’s application, our concern must be with the applicant’s

present moral character.            In Greenberg, we explained that “it is

[the applicant’s] moral character as of now with which we are

concerned.”          126 Ariz. at 292, 614 P.2d at 834; see also Rule

36(a)3.        Past misconduct, however, is not irrelevant.                 Rather,

this Court must determine what past bad acts reveal about an

applicant’s current character.

                                          III.

¶18            In    compliance     with    Rule       36(a)4.E,     the   Committee

conducted a formal hearing to consider Hamm’s application.                      The

Committee heard testimony on May 20 and June 2, 2004.                         Hamm,

representing himself, and his wife presented extensive testimony.

In addition, the Committee heard from three licensed attorneys

who had worked with Hamm and who recommended his admission and

also considered letters from those opposed to and in support of

Hamm’s    application.             In   detailed       findings,     the   Committee

specifically considered the various factors set out in Rule 36(a)

to determine Hamm’s character and fitness to be admitted to the

Bar.     In its report, the Committee stated that, in reaching its

conclusions, it considered the following:




                                           10
       1)      Hamm’s unlawful conduct, which included the
               commission of two violent “execution style”
               murders and his testimony as to the facts
               surrounding the murders.
       2)      Hamm’s omissions on his Application and his
               testimony in explaining his failure to disclose
               all required information.
       3)      Hamm’s neglect of his financial responsibilities
               and/or violation of a longstanding child support
               court order and his testimony as to his failure
               to comply with the court order.
       4)      Hamm’s mental or emotional instability impairing
               his ability to perform the functions of an
               attorney including his testimony as to any
               diagnosis and treatment.4

¶19          After    reviewing     all    these     factors,        the     Committee

concluded that Hamm had not met his burden of establishing that

he possesses the requisite character and fitness for admission to

the    Bar   and   accordingly     recommended       that    his     application    be

denied.      We now consider the Committee’s findings, together with

pertinent facts.

                                          A.

¶20          The serious nature of Hamm’s past criminal conduct is

beyond dispute.       Hamm acknowledges that no more serious criminal

conduct exists than committing first-degree murder.                        Our society

reserves     its   harshest     punishment     for   those    convicted       of   such

conduct.      See Tucson Rapid Transit Co. v. Rubiaz, 21 Ariz. 221,

231,   187   P.    568,   572   (1920)    (describing       murder    as    “the   most


4
      The Committee was divided as to the significance of
complaints made concerning Hamm’s alleged unauthorized practice
of law.      This Court’s decision does not rely upon those
allegations.


                                          11
serious crime known to the law”).

¶21        Hamm’s past criminal conduct and the serious nature of

that conduct affect the burden he must meet to establish good

moral character.      He must first establish rehabilitation from

prior criminal conduct, a requirement that adds to his burden of

showing   current   good    moral   character.    See    In   re   Adams,   540

S.E.2d 609, 610 (Ga. 2001) (“Where an applicant for admission to

the bar has a criminal record, his or her burden of establishing

present good moral character takes on the added weight of proving

full      and       complete        rehabilitation        subsequent        to

conviction . . . .”);       In re Allan S., 387 A.2d 271, 275 (Md.

1978) (“Although a prior conviction is not conclusive of a lack

of present good moral character, . . . it adds to his burden of

establishing present good character by requiring convincing proof

of his full and complete rehabilitation.”).

¶22        The   added     burden   becomes   greater    as   past   unlawful

conduct becomes more serious.        In In re Arrotta, we considered an

application for reinstatement from an attorney who, eight years

earlier, pled guilty to mail fraud and bribery.               208 Ariz. 509,

96 P.3d 213 (2004).        We noted there that “the more serious the

misconduct that led to disbarment, the more difficult is the

applicant’s task in showing rehabilitation.”            Id. at 512 ¶ 12, 96

P.3d at 216.     An applicant for initial admission to the Bar who

is attempting to overcome the negative implications of a serious


                                      12
felony on his current moral character likewise must overcome a

greater burden for more serious crimes.              We agree with the New

Jersey   Supreme   Court,   which    recognized     that     “in   the    case    of

extremely damning past misconduct, a showing of rehabilitation

may be virtually impossible to make.”              In re Matthews, 462 A.2d

165, 176 (N.J. 1983).        Indeed, we are aware of no instance in

which a person convicted of first-degree murder has been admitted

to the practice of law.

¶23        To   show    rehabilitation,     Hamm    must    show   that    he    has

accepted responsibility for his criminal conduct.                    Hamm fully

recognizes his need to make this showing.            Indeed, he states that

his   rehabilitation      could     not    have    proceeded       absent       such

acceptance.     We recognize the Committee’s concern that Hamm has

not yet fully accepted responsibility for the two murders.                      Hamm

says he has done so, repeatedly and strongly, but some of his

other statements indicate to the contrary.                 The inconsistencies

among his various statements related to accepting responsibility

are most evident when he discusses Staples’ murder.                  Although he

told the Committee that he accepts responsibility for Staples’

murder, in fact he consistently assigns that responsibility to

his accomplice.        His testimony revealed almost no attention to

the commission or aftermath of Staples’ murder.                    Hamm concedes

that he has focused on his role in Morley’s murder rather than on

his role in Staples’ murder.              The difference in approach, he


                                      13
explains, resulted from one postcard written to him by Morley’s

grandmother and his decision to use his connection to Morley to

provide motivation to overcome difficulties.             We have no reason

to doubt that Hamm’s focus on Morley’s murder aided him, using

his words, in “accomplishing things that people have been telling

me I can’t do and we’re [Hamm and Morley] still doing it today.”

That fact, however, does nothing to assure us that Hamm has taken

responsibility    for   Staples’   murder,   as   he   must   if   he    is   to

establish rehabilitation.

¶24        We also give serious consideration to the Committee’s

finding that Hamm was not completely forthright in his testimony

about the murders.5      Hamm has insisted in his filings with this

Court that he did not intend to kill, but only to rob, his

victims.    The    agreed   facts,   however,     lead   directly       to    the

inference that Hamm intended to kill.             He conspired with his

accomplices to rob the victims; he accepted the gun provided by

Wells and took it with him in the car with the victims; he

testified that, although he did not intend to kill the victims,

he was “afraid” they would be killed when he got in the car; he

shot Morley without ever attempting a robbery and shot him a

second time to make certain he was dead; and he also shot Staples


5
      Hamm’s lack of candor on this question also impacts our
analysis of whether he met his burden of showing present good
moral character.   See Section III, subsections B through E,
infra.


                                     14
to prevent his escape.        The Committee observed Hamm testify and

was able to judge the credibility of his testimony in light of

uncontested facts.        We agree that the record shows that Hamm,

despite his current protestations to the contrary, intended to

kill the victims.         His failure to confront the fact that these

murders were intentional undermines his statements that he fully

accepts responsibility for his actions.

¶25        As did the Committee, we give substantial weight to

Hamm’s   attempts    at   rehabilitation.      In   Section   I,   supra,   we

described in some detail the activities Hamm has undertaken, both

while in and since his release from prison.              We are impressed

with the sincerity and fervor of those who testified or submitted

letters on Hamm’s behalf.          Were rehabilitation the only showing

Hamm must make to establish good moral character, we would weigh

those    factors    tending   to   show    rehabilitation     against   those

tending to show a lack thereof.            Under the facts of this case,

however, we need not decide whether the facts of record establish

rehabilitation.

¶26        When an applicant has committed first-degree murder, a

crime that demonstrates an extreme lack of good moral character,

that applicant must make an extraordinary showing of present good

moral character to establish that he or she is qualified to be

admitted to the practice of law.            Even assuming that Hamm has

established rehabilitation, showing rehabilitation from criminal


                                      15
conduct    does     not,   in    itself,    establish        good   moral   character.

Rehabilitation is a necessary, but not sufficient, ingredient of

good moral character.            An applicant must establish his current

good moral character, independent of and in addition to, evidence

of rehabilitation.           We conclude that Hamm failed to make that

showing.

                                           B.

¶27          We    share   the       Committee’s      deep   concern    about     Hamm’s

longstanding       failure      to    fulfill,   or    even    address,     his    child

support obligation to his son, born in 1969, four years before

Hamm and his first wife separated.                    Not until he prepared his

application for admission to the Bar in 2004 did Hamm make any

effort to meet his responsibility to provide support for his son.

During the Committee hearing, Hamm advanced several explanations

for his failure to do so.               Like the Committee, we find none of

his explanations credible.

¶28          Although Hamm attempts to excuse his failure to pay

child support by pointing out that he never received a copy of a

final divorce decree, Hamm scarcely can claim that he lacked

awareness of his obligation.              A few months after he and his wife

separated in 1973, Hamm was arrested on a misdemeanor charge of

failing to pay child support.               On May 6, 1974, James and Karen

Hamm’s divorce decree set Hamm’s child support payments at $75.00

a   month.        Hamm   made    no    effort    to    learn   the     extent     of   his


                                           16
financial obligation to his son from 1974, when Hamm was twenty-

six years old, until 2004, when he was fifty-five.                During those

nearly thirty years, he gained sophistication and attended law

school.     He must have known, and certainly should have known,

that he had long avoided a basic parental obligation.6

¶29         Hamm also attempted to excuse his inattention to his

obligation by explaining that he learned, first from a private

investigator hired by his wife in 1988, and later from his son,

that his former wife’s new husband had adopted his son.                         His

reliance on the private investigator’s 1988 report to excuse his

failure   is     surprising,   given   the   fact   that   his   son    was   only

months from the age of majority when Hamm learned of the report;

he provides no explanation for his lack of concern prior to that

date.

¶30         Hamm further explained that only when he applied for

admission to the Bar in 2004 did he discover that his son had not

been adopted and then “calculated the child support payment [due]

over the years.”        Hamm determined that he owed $10,000.00 and,

even    though    the   statute   of   limitations    barred     an    action    to




6
      Hamm also cannot attribute his failure           to pay child support
to the absence of funds.      Even while in            prison, Hamm earned
“somewhere around a hundred dollars a month             probably,” but used
no portion of those earnings to discharge his          obligation.



                                       17
recover   past    amounts    due,7   contacted    his   son    and   set   up   a

repayment schedule.

¶31         “Behavior of such long duration cannot be considered as

a temporary aberration . . . .”            Walker, 112 Ariz. at 138, 539

P.2d at 895; see also Office of Disciplinary Counsel v. Lewis,

426 A.2d 1138 (Pa. 1981) (holding that even when an attorney made

belated restitution for funds taken from clients, because “[s]uch

actions   cannot    be   said   to   be    consistent   with    high   ethical

standards    of    the      profession,    with    a    lawyer's     fiduciary

responsibility to his client, with a character that is beyond

reproach, or with truth, candor and honesty,” the attorney could


7
      When asked if he had taken steps to formalize his agreement
with his son to pay back child support, Hamm replied, “No. No.
I simply acknowledged the debt regardless whether it is a legal
debt or not and whether it’s an enforceable debt or not.” In its
findings, the Committee noted that Hamm “has since taken it upon
himself to attempt to comply with his child support obligations,”
but expressed concern that he made no admission of a legal
obligation to pay.       Whether an action to enforce Hamm’s
obligation to his son is in fact time-barred is unclear. In Huff
v. Huff, the Texas Supreme Court held that a ten-year statute of
limitations under Tex. Rev. Civ. Stat. Ann. art. 5532, since
repealed by Acts 1985, 69th Leg., ch. 959, § 9(1), eff. Sept. 1,
1985, applied to violations of child support orders. 648 S.W.2d
286, 287–88 (Tex. 1983) (allowing a claim based on a 1973 divorce
decree).   Because Hamm’s son turned eighteen in 1987, the ten-
year statute of limitations expired in 1997.     In 2002, however,
the Texas Supreme Court held that an administrative writ, created
by constitutional amendment in 1997, could be used to enforce a
divorce decree issued in 1974, for which no order was obtained,
because the administrative writ is a “new and improved
enforcement mechanism.”    In re A.D., 73 S.W.3d 244, 248 (Tex.
2002). We need not resolve this question of Texas law, but share
the   Committee’s  concern   over  Hamm’s   failure   to  formally
investigate his legal obligations to his son.


                                      18
not   continue    to    practice     law).      Hamm’s   failure   to    meet    his

parental    obligation        for    nearly    thirty    years   makes   it     more

difficult for him to make the required extraordinary showing that

he “has conducted himself as a man ordinarily would, should, or

does.”   Walker, 112 Ariz. at 138, 539 P.2d at 895.

¶32         We also agree with the Committee that Hamm did not

display honesty and candor in discussing his failure to pay child

support with the Committee.              Hamm testified both that his son

told him personally that he had been adopted and that his son

“adamantly refused” to accept interest payments on the unpaid

child support.

¶33         Hamm’s son testified, however, that he had never been

adopted, that prior to his contact with Hamm he had changed his

name himself, and that he had not told Hamm he had been adopted.

Hamm’s   son     also   did    not    report    adamantly    refusing    interest

payments.      In response to a question from the Committee about

interest payments, he said:

      Discussions about interest?     Seems like whenever we
      were talking about it, you know, he said it was a large
      amount, and it seems like the subject of interest did
      come up.   I can’t remember exactly, you know, what we
      said about it. But, you know, I didn’t push the issue
      or anything, say, well, you know, you’re going to pay
      me interest for this or what, or is there any interest.
      It wasn’t really an issue or important to me.

¶34         We discern no reason that Hamm’s son would have been

other than forthright about these matters, while Hamm had every




                                         19
reason to present himself in the best possible light.8                          Like the

Committee, we find the testimony of his son to be more credible.

                                             C.

¶35          We    further      conclude      that    Hamm   did    not        adequately

explain his failure to disclose an incident involving him and his

current wife, Donna, when he submitted his application to the

Committee.

¶36          In    1996,     Hamm      and    Donna    engaged      in     a    physical

altercation outside a convenience store.                  Donna “yelled the word

‘kidnap’ out of the window” of the vehicle Hamm was driving,

causing him to pull over and leave the vehicle.                           During their

tussle, Donna tore Hamm’s shirt.                  Both called the police, who

arrested neither Hamm nor Donna.                  The incident and what Donna

describes as her “embellishments” caused such great concern to

the Hamms, particularly because Hamm was on parole, that Donna

submitted to a polygraph administered by a private company to

demonstrate       that   Hamm    had    not   kidnapped      her.        The    two   also

underwent marital counseling.

¶37          Nonetheless, when filling out his Character and Fitness


8
      Rather than acknowledge any inconsistencies between his
testimony and that of his son, Hamm lashed out at the Committee’s
refusal to agree with Hamm’s argument, which the Committee could
accept only if it accepted Hamm’s testimony on this issue as
credible. Hamm accused the Committee of “totally ignor[ing] the
content of [Hamm’s Petition] to which it supposedly was
responding.”



                                             20
Report, Hamm failed to disclose the incident to the Committee.

Question   25   on   the   report    asks   specifically   whether   the

applicant, among other things, has been “questioned” concerning

any felony or misdemeanor.9         Hamm told the Committee that, in

reading the application, he missed the word “questioned” in the

list of encounters with law enforcement that Question 25 directs

an applicant to report.

¶38        Hamm’s explanation strains credulity.       In Walker, this

Court inferred that the son of an Army officer would understand

the requirement to register for the draft. 112 Ariz. at 138, 539

P.2d at 895.    Likewise, we infer from Hamm’s knowledge of the law

and his efforts in 1996 to document a defense for the domestic

incident that he fully understood its importance and must have

known that the incident would be of interest to the Committee.

His failure to include it in his initial application further

affects his ability to make the needed extraordinary showing of

good moral character.

9
      Question 25 asks:

      Have you either as an adult or a juvenile, ever been
      served with a criminal summons, questioned, arrested,
      taken into custody, indicted, charged with, tried for,
      pleaded guilty to or been convicted of, or ever been
      the   subject  of  an   investigation  concerning  the
      violation of, any felony or misdemeanor? (In answering
      this question, include all incidents, no matter how
      trivial or minor the infraction or whether guilty or
      not, whether expunged or not, whether you believe or




                                    21
                                       D.

¶39        Hamm’s   actions        during   these     proceedings      also    raise

questions about his fitness to practice law.                The introduction to

Hamm’s petition before this Court begins:

      The consequences of this case for Petitioner take it
      out of the ordinary realm of civil cases.        If the
      Committee’s recommendation is followed, it will prevent
      him from earning a living through practicing law. This
      deprivation has consequences of the greatest import for
      Petitioner, who has invested years of study and a great
      deal of financial resources in preparing to be a lawyer
      . . . .

This language repeats nearly verbatim the language of the United

States Supreme Court in Konigsberg v. State Bar, 353 U.S. 252

(1957), in which the Court wrote:

      While this is not a criminal case, its consequences for
      Konigsberg take it out of the ordinary run of civil
      cases. The Committee's action prevents him from earning
      a living by practicing law. This deprivation has grave
      consequences for a man who has spent years of study and
      a great deal of money in preparing to be a lawyer.

Id. at 257–58.      If an attorney submits work to a court that is

not his own, his actions may violate the rules of professional

conduct.   Iowa Supreme Court Bd. of Prof’l Ethics & Conduct v.

Lane,    642    N.W.2d      296,     299     (Iowa      2002)    (“[P]lagiarism

constitute[s],    among   other      things,   a     misrepresentation        to   the

court.     An    attorney    may      not    engage    in   conduct     involving

dishonesty, fraud, deceit, or misrepresentation.”); see also Rule


________________________
     were advised that         you    need     not    disclose   any    such
     instance.)


                                       22
42,    ER   8.4(c)      (defining      professional     misconduct         as   including

“engag[ing]        in   conduct      involving    dishonesty,      fraud,       deceit   or

misrepresentation”).            We are concerned about Hamm’s decision to

quote from the Supreme Court’s opinion without attribution and

are equally troubled by his failure to acknowledge his error.

When    the   Committee’s         response    pointed       to    Hamm’s    failure      to

attribute this language to Konigsberg, he avoided the serious

questions raised and refused to confront or apologize for his

improper          actions,      asserting        instead:        “From     Petitioner’s

perspective, any eloquence that might be found in the Petition

does not derive from any prior case decided in any jurisdiction,

but rather from the gradual development of his own potential

through study, reflection, and devotion to the duty created by

his    commission       of    murder.”      Hamm    apparently      either      does     not

regard      his     actions     as    improper     or   simply     refuses       to    take

responsibility.          In either case, his actions here do not assist

him in making the requisite showing of good moral character.10


10
      In addition to the matters discussed above, only four years
have passed since James Hamm was absolutely discharged. The fact
that Hamm has been free of supervision for this relatively short
time weighs against his admission to the practice of law.
Greenberg, 126 Ariz. at 293, 614 P.2d at 835 (noting that
“[r]ehabilitation is seldom accomplished in an instantaneous
fashion” and holding that Greenberg had “not convinced [the
Court] that he as yet evidences the requisite good moral
character”)(emphasis added); see also In re Dortch, 860 A.2d 346,
348 (D.C. 2004) (finding it “would be erosive of public
confidence in the legal profession and the administration of
justice were we to admit an applicant who is still on parole for


                                            23
                                                E.

¶40               When   Hamm   committed       first-degree         murder       in   1974,    he

demonstrated his extreme lack of good moral character.                                 Although

this Court has not adopted a per se rule excluding an applicant

whose past includes such serious criminal misconduct, we agree

with those jurisdictions that have held that an applicant with

such     a    background         must     make       an    extraordinary           showing      of

rehabilitation and present good moral character to be admitted to

the practice of law.                  Perhaps such a showing is, in practical

terms, a near impossibility.                    We need not decide that question

today,       however,      because       Hamm’s        lack    of        candor    before      the

Committee          and    this        Court,     his       failure         to     accept      full

responsibility           for    his    serious       criminal        misconduct,       and     his

failure to accept or fulfill, on a timely basis, his parental

obligation of support for his son, all show that Hamm has not met

the    stringent         standard      that    applies        to    an    applicant     in     his

position who seeks to show his present good moral character.

                                               IV.

¶41               Hamm asserts that he was denied due process of law

because       two    members     of    the     Committee       may       have   prejudged      the

merits       of    his   application.           Both      members,        however,     left    the

Committee proceedings when their potential bias came to light,

________________________
crimes as serious as those committed by Dortch”).  Because Hamm
otherwise failed to establish good moral character, however, we


                                                24
and   neither    played      any    role    in   the   Committee’s      findings    and

recommendation.

¶42          Hamm, like all applicants for membership in the Bar, is

entitled   to    receive      due    process      of    law.     “The     fundamental

requirement of due process is the opportunity to be heard ‘at a

meaningful      time   and    in    a   meaningful       manner.’”        Mathews    v.

Eldridge, 424 U.S. 319, 333 (1976) (quoting Armstrong v. Manzo,

380 U.S. 545, 552 (1965)).                 Also, “due process requires that a

party be given a ‘fair trial in a fair tribunal.’”                      United States

v. Superior Court, 144 Ariz. 265, 280, 697 P.2d 658, 673 (1985)

(quoting In re Murchison, 349 U.S. 133, 136 (1955)).                        Both the

Committee and this Court have provided Hamm ample opportunity to

be heard through hearings and written arguments.                     Moreover, this

Court,   and    not    the   Committee,       made     the   ultimate    decision    on

Hamm’s application.          Hamm received a full opportunity to be heard

before a fair tribunal.




________________________
reached our decision without considering this factor.


                                            25
                                       V.

¶43       Because James Hamm has failed to meet his burden of

proving   that   he   is   of   good    moral   character,   we   deny   his

application for admission to the State Bar of Arizona.




                           __________________________________
                           Ruth V. McGregor, Chief Justice

CONCURRING:


_________________________________
Michael D. Ryan, Justice


_________________________________
Andrew D. Hurwitz, Justice


_________________________________
W. Scott Bales, Justice


_________________________________
Jefferson L. Lankford, Judge*



*     The Honorable Rebecca White Berch recused herself; pursuant
to Article VI, Section 3 of the Arizona Constitution, the
Honorable Jefferson L. Lankford, Judge of the Court of Appeals,
Division One was designated to sit in her stead.




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