Plea Deal Upsets Scorned Lawyers
[*]  Justice: They want a tougher sentence for an attorney who allegedly

used a stolen identity to chastise them online.


Criminal defense lawyers make their living in part by pleading for
forgiveness on behalf of their clients. But in the case of Ana Maria
Patino, members of the California Public Defender Assn. are crying out
for blood.

Patino is a Santa Ana attorney who used the organization's closed
Internet chat room to attack other members with a stream of angry
missives, association officials say.

After being booted out of the group last year, Patino reemerged
surreptitiously, using the online identity of a young law school
graduate, prosecutors said.

This prompted an investigation by the FBI and local police that resulted
in charges of identity theft and forgery.

Prosecutors, however, have agreed to dismiss the charges if Patino
apologizes, performs community service and pays $1,500 in fines.

The deal has members of the association crying foul, saying that Patino
victimized them and avoided jail time by hiring a well-connected defense
lawyer.

They say prosecutors are letting her off too easily.

They also complain that as the "victims" of the crime, they were never
consulted about the plea deal.

"I'm astounded. Clearly the D.A. doesn't care about identity theft,"
said association board member Don Landis, who is an Orange County deputy
public defender.

"They're really interested in victims' issues when they want to be tough
on some indigent client who pocketed something at Mervyn's, but when it
comes to dealing with an Orange County lawyer, it's a different matter.
It's hypocritical."

Members of the group--which is open to all defense attorneys--plan to
take the unusual step of asking a judge next month to scuttle the plea
bargain and demand stiffer punishment for Patino.

Patino, a defense lawyer who specializes in appeals cases involving
immigration law, was the chat room's most active participant.

Firing off 10 to 15 critical messages a day on a variety of
criminal-defense topics, Patino would sometimes sign her electronic
missives as "Xena" or "Lady Anne."

Chat-room users say many lawyers felt the heat of Patino's flames, but
the 54-year-old attorney allegedly crossed the line when she picked
fights with the leader of the Orange County Bar Assn.

"I really don't know why you would think anyone would care what you
think," Patino wrote to then-Orange County Bar President Jennifer
Keller.

"You never have ceased to amaze me in your pretentious sense of power
which you choose to gloat over people."

Patino also took aim at association director Michael Cantrall, cursing
him and vowing to "bring you down and everyone else associated with
you."

The defenders group responded by stripping Patino of her chat-room
privileges and terminating her membership in the association.

But in June of last year, just weeks after she was bounced from the chat
room, Patino reemerged under a false identity, the association said.

Using the name and a bar license number of a 28-year-old law school
graduate, Patino reportedly resumed her electronic chats as Lianna
Figueroa.

The alleged ruse worked for several months, association officials said,
until Patino began to complain to the site's Webmaster about service.

The Webmaster reportedly recognized Patino's confrontational style and
telephoned the real Lianna Figueroa to ask whether she was dissatisfied
with the Web site.

"I had no clue what they were talking about," Figueroa said.

"I just finished law school. I never applied to them for an account."

Authorities eventually charged Patino with identity theft, forgery and
fraud.

Patino hired powerhouse Orange County defense lawyer Alan Stokke, who
discussed a plea deal with prosecutors.

Deputy Dist. Atty. Susan Riezman said Stokke's political connections
played no role in the deal.

"This is an appropriate agreement based on the totality of the
circumstances, and the non-seriousness of the crime," Riezman said.

"The victim suffered no financial loss nor any loss of reputation."

Riezman noted the matter would also be investigated by the State Bar of
California.

Patino insists that she has done nothing wrong and is being persecuted
by the association. "I am innocent," Patino said. "I do not know
anything about Lianna Figueroa. I don't know her and I don't know
anything about an apology."

She insists that the public defenders are out to get her. As an appeals
lawyer, she said, she regularly exposes the sloppy work of public
defenders.

"Their motivation is to get back at me," Patino said. "I make them look
bad. They're motivated by envy."

Figueroa, the lawyer whose identity Patino allegedly used, said she has
been troubled by the experience.

She said prosecutors should hold Patino to a higher standard because she
is a lawyer.

"I have no idea what this person was telling people under my name, and
I'm worried people will think it's me who said it," Figueroa said.

"Nobody seems to care. I went to the police and they said, 'Big whoop,
nobody lost any money.' I want somebody to take this seriously."

http://www.latimes.com/editions/orange/la-me-slander24sep24004425(0,7670063).story?coll=la%2Deditions%2Dorange

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