Canadian Lawyer

January 2013

The most widely read magazine for Canadian lawyers

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ThERE ARE dEFINITE dISCREpANCIES IN ThE WAY LAW SOCIETIES dISCIpLINE MEMBERS. SOME LAWYERS SEE ThEIR LICENSES QUIETLY REVOKEd, WhILE OThERS ENdURE LONG, pUBLIC hEARINGS ThAT ARE hUMILIATING ANd pERMANENTLY dAMAGING. NE F t Anthony Merchan MY BY BRUCE LIVESEY ew recent legal scandals have generated as much Sturm und Drang as the one caused by Winnipeg lawyer Jack King. Years ago, he tried to coerce a client into having sex with his wife, Lori Douglas, today an associate chief justice in Manitoba. This past summer, the salacious details of King's actions were exposed during a Canadian Judicial Council hearing set up to determine whether Douglas should remain on the bench. Yet what got obscured in all of the titillating evidence and testimony is whether this train wreck could have been avoided if the Law Society of Manitoba had opened a formal investigation into King back in 2004 when they first learned of his actions — a year before Douglas was first appointed to the bench. "The law society completely failed the public in this case," insists Rocco Galati, the Toronto lawyer who currently represents Alex Chapman, the client King had tried to finagle into his sexual escapade. "It completely failed the public." Was the law society reluctant to pursue King because he was a partner at one of Manitoba's oldest law firms — and one that boasts ties to the law society itself? Or did the law society harshly punish the sole practitioner who first represented Chapman in this dispute because members of King's old firm sat on the law society's complaints investigation committee? T. Sher Singh Lori douglas www.CANADIAN L a w ye r m a g . c o m Jan uary 2013 27

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