Canadian Lawyer

May 2017

The most widely read magazine for Canadian lawyers

Issue link: https://digital.canadianlawyermag.com/i/815022

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 9 of 67

10 M A Y 2 0 1 7 w w w . C A N A D I A N L a w y e r m a g . c o m before, but he had asked Jackson several times if she could help him find some, according to the decision. She helped him buy half a gram of heroin in January 2013, but she sug- gested he should do a small amount. She divided the half-gram into three doses for him and administered one of them. Cieslik consumed the drug at Jackson's house and later fell asleep. She did not notice until the next morning that he had died and she called 911. She was later charged with manslaughter. At trial, a judge found that her actions constituted trafficking, but she was not charged with that offence. The judge acquitted her of the manslaughter charge as he determined that a final dose that Cieslik had administered on himself did away with any possible causal link between Jackson's actions and his death. The trial judge also found that Jackson was not guilty of criminal negligence caus- ing death. "These were tragic circumstances," said John Dent, the lawyer representing Jack- son in the law society proceedings. "My client has co-operated with the law society throughout these proceedings and has accepted responsibility for her actions. She hopes to move forward now." Jackson, who was called to the bar in 2003, has not had an active licence since January 2013. She was listed as retired or not working until she was administratively suspended in August 2013. In 2014, she signed an undertaking that she would not practise while the law society's disciplinary proceedings were underway. The law society's proceedings involved a joint submission by Dent and a lawyer representing the law society, where both parties agreed to the penalty. The charges that Jackson failed to report to the law society included an impaired driving charge in 2012, as well as a cocaine possession charge that was dropped. The decision said she also failed to report a charge for not complying with a condition of a recognizance in 2013. Under the law society's By-Law 8, lawyers must let the regulator know about when they are charged with an indictable offence "as soon as reasonably practicable." Jackson was found to have engaged in conduct unbecoming a lawyer, as her actions had brought "discredit upon the legal profession." Following the suspension, which was retroactive to May 27, 2016, Jackson will not be able to resume practising law until a medical practitioner chosen by the law society assesses her. She will also have to provide evidence to the law soci- ety's professional regulation division that she is capable of meeting her obligations as a lawyer. Harvin Pitch, a lawyer at Teplitsky, Colson LLP who has represented lawyers in law society discipline matters, says he found the penalty surprising, as the law society has been very aggressive in penalizing lawyers in mortgage-related issues. He was not involved in the case. Pitch says that lawyers who simply fail to see red flags when unknowingly dealing with fraudsters can easily lose their licence. "As someone who has seen it from the commercial litigation side, I find it unusual that with these drug-related offences and the terrible and sad events caused or contributed by this lawyer that the lawyer wouldn't have been dis- barred," he says. "I can only conclude out of respect for the panel that there must have been extenuating circumstances that I'm not aware of because, certainly in the com- mercial area, there is harsher treatment." Toronto lawyer Lee Akazaki, who was not involved in the proceedings, says it is important to remember that at the centre of these proceedings was someone who was suffering, and that she would have to go through an assessment to prove she was capable of practising again. "This is a case in which it's deserving, I believe, a tremendous amount of com- passion from both the legal profession and the public, because she has evident- ly suffered considerably, not the least of which is the loss of her childhood friend," he says. "It's not so much a question of pun- ishment but the steps that both she and the profession have to take in order to allow her to come back to practice." The hearing panel considered a num- ber of other decisions in its analysis of how long the suspension should be. One of the decisions it considered was Law Society of Upper Canada v. Li, in which a lawyer was convicted of smug- gling drugs into jail for a prisoner. His licence was revoked, but the law society hearing panel determined the lawyer's misuse of his position made that case much more serious. Akazaki notes that the infractions in Jackson's case arose from events that were part of her personal life rather than her legal practice. "I think the tribunal was correct in distinguishing these facts from others where there was a misuse of the lawyer's position," he says. A spokeswoman for the law society said it is not the regulator's policy to "interpret or comment on decisions made by the tribunal hearing panel." — ALEX ROBINSON \ AT L A N T I C \ C E N T R A L \ W E S T REGIONAL WRAP-UP The Law Society of Upper Canada has suspended a Hamilton lawyer for eight months after her friend died of a drug overdose. LSUC suspends lawyer for helping friend buy heroin Continued from page 9

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of Canadian Lawyer - May 2017