The State Bar Court of California has recommended that G. Paul Howes get a three-year suspension for misconduct he committed in Washington DC in the 1980s.
Reportedly, Howes had run afoul of law enforcement while serving as an assistant U.S. attorney. The Washington DC Court of Appeals disbarred him in 2012.
By that time, Howes had moved to San Diego and become a partner of Milberg Weiss LLP. The San Diego branch was headed by William Lerach, who eventually went to prison for legal misbehavior. Milberg Weiss eventually became Lerach Coughlin Stoia Geller Rudman & Robbins.
Howes resigned from the firm when he was disbarred in DC. He now works as an investigator for a law firm in Texas that specializes in asbestos litigation.
The State Bar Court of California has recommended that G. Paul Howes get a three-year suspension for misconduct he committed in Washington DC in the 1980s.
Reportedly, Howes had run afoul of law enforcement while serving as an assistant U.S. attorney. The Washington DC Court of Appeals disbarred him in 2012.
By that time, Howes had moved to San Diego and become a partner of Milberg Weiss LLP. The San Diego branch was headed by William Lerach, who eventually went to prison for legal misbehavior. Milberg Weiss eventually became Lerach Coughlin Stoia Geller Rudman & Robbins.
Howes resigned from the firm when he was disbarred in DC. He now works as an investigator for a law firm in Texas that specializes in asbestos litigation.
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