-Caveat Lector-

http://www.miami.com/herald/content/news/local/dade/digdocs/032611.htm

Miami Herald
Saturday, July 21, 2001

Rodham cleared of ethics charges

Lawyer didn't violate rules by charging for pardon  requests, Florida Bar
says


BY JAY WEAVER
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


The Florida Bar has cleared Hugh Rodham of violating ethics rules as a
lawyer when he successfully lobbied his brother-in-law, former President
Bill Clinton, for clemency on behalf of two politically connected felons.

The two cases, for which the Fort Lauderdale attorney was paid $400,000,
caused such embarrassment for the former president and his wife, New York
Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, that they demanded Rodham return the money to
his clients.

The Clintons said they had been unaware of his financial arrangement.
Rodham, of Coral Gables, gave back the money.

``What he did was not unethical for a lawyer to have done, because what he
did was not the practice of law,'' Rodham's attorney, Andrew Berman, said
Friday. He added that Rodham did not want to comment.

The Florida Bar opened its probe Feb. 22 after reading media reports about
Rodham's role in the pardons. Last month, the Bar's grievance committee in
Broward County looked into whether Rodham's fees were improper and whether
his conduct was dishonest. It concluded there was insufficient evidence to
file a formal complaint against Rodham, 50, with the Florida Supreme Court.

The committee's finding spared Rodham from a court hearing that could have
led to disciplinary action, from a reprimand to a suspension, by the high
court.

``It cannot be said that . . . accepting a contingency fee for assistance
in a clemency proceeding is improper per se,'' attorney Barry Rigby, chief
branch disciplinary counsel, wrote in a July 16 letter to various people
who complained to the Bar about Rodham's conduct.

The committee, consisting of four lawyers and two nonlawyers, reasoned that
Rodham did not violate the Bar's ethics rules because the ``clemency
process is not a judicial proceeding'' and because his case did not involve
a ``compelling public interest.''

They noted that Rodham's two clients -- convicted drug trafficker Carlos
Vignali and convicted vitamin businessman Glenn Braswell, who has a home in
Coconut Grove -- did not complain to the Bar about paying the fees.

Rodham collected $200,000 from each of them after former President Clinton
pardoned them.

Coral Gables attorney Jack Thompson, who is among the 45 people who filed
complaints with the Bar about Rodham's conduct, said he was ``bitterly
disappointed'' in the grievance committee's decision to close the
investigation.

``Once again the Florida Bar dropped the ball,'' said Thompson, a vocal
conservative who once ran for Miami-Dade state attorney against Janet Reno,
who served as Clinton's attorney general.

``Clearly, Hugh Rodham was not doing legal work here,'' Thompson said. ``He
was selling access to the president of the United States. That's what
strikes most people from a common-sense standpoint.

``These pardons were supposed to be decided on the merits, not on access to
the president. It engulfed Bill Clinton for the last two days of his
administration and about three months into his retirement. Of course, it
affected the public interest.''

Rodham's attorney said Thompson and the other complainants' motives were
political.

``There is no question that the people who filed these complaints have been
vocal in their criticism of the former president and his family,'' Berman
said. ``They were going after the next best thing.''

Rodham's lobbying on behalf of Vignali and Braswell coincided with reports
about the former president's pardon of Marc Rich, a fugitive financier
whose ex-wife is a major Democratic fundraiser.

The U.S. attorney's office in Manhattan is investigating Rich's pardon as
well as others among the 177 pardons and commutations issued by Clinton.

The Bar, in Rigby's letter, indicated that it attempted to obtain
information from the U.S. attorney in Manhattan as well as from the U.S.
Department of Justice about Rodham -- but was turned down.

``If Mr. Rodham ultimately is found to have violated any laws with regard
to these pardons,'' Rigby wrote, ``the Florida Bar will open a new file and
seek discipline based on those findings.''


Copyright 2001 Miami Herald


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