NEWS RELEASE
August 18, 2000
EOIR Takes First
Disciplinary Actions Against Immigration Practitioners
Five Attorneys Suspended under Amended Rules of Professional
Conduct
The Executive Office for Immigration Review (EOIR) has
formally suspended five attorneys from practicing before the
Immigration Courts, the Board of Immigration Appeals (the Board),
and the Immigration and Naturalization Service. Their
suspensions, on grounds of EOIR disciplinary rule violations
arising out of sanctions imposed by other jurisdictions, are the
first disciplinary actions taken by EOIR under the recently
amended Rules of Professional Conduct for Immigration
Practitioners, provided in Title 8 of the Code of Federal
Regulations (8 CFR Part 3 and 292).
The Board of Immigration Appeals ordered immediate suspensions of
the attorneys named below after EOIR's Office of the General
Counsel filed petitions for immediate suspension and Notices of
Intent to Discipline with the Board fur the reasons stated:
Milton Dan Kramer, disbarred by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals and suspended for 3 years by the Second Judicial Department of the New York Supreme Court;
Carolyn Elaine Miyashita, disbarred by the Ninth Circuit and suspended for 5 years by the North Carolina State Bar;
Kenneth R. Rastello, suspended for 180 days by the Michigan Attorney Discipline Board;
Alan E. Koczela, law license revoked by the Virginia State Bar; and
Antonio Reyes-Vidal, suspended 84 months (with 6O months probated) by the District Court f Bexar, Texas.
The amended rules, which were published in the Federal
Register on June 27, 2000, and which became effective on July 27,
include provisions specifying grounds for disciplinary action,
requirements for receiving and investigating complaints, and
procedures for conducting hearings. The rule also authorizes the
Board to immediately suspend a practitioner who has been subject
to either disbarment, suspension, or resignation with an
admission of misconduct as imposed by a State or Federal court,
pending a summary proceeding and final sanction,
In the matters cited above, the Board's orders direct the
suspended attorneys "to promptly notify, in writing, any
clients with cases currently pending before the Board, the
Immigration Courts, or the Service that the respondent has been
suspended from practicing before these bodies."
Each suspended attorney also received a Notice of Intent to
Discipline directing him or her to respond within 30 days to the
charge. In the response, each may state his or her defenses
against the imposition of the recommended final discipline and
seek a hearing.
EOIR announces these actions to inform the public of its ongoing
efforts to prevent or correct misconduct and misrepresentation by
immigration practitioners. EOIR also will post a list of
suspended and expelled practitioners on its Web site at www.usdoj.gov/eoir.
--EOIR--
NEWS RELEASE
August 22, 2000
- CORRECTION -
EOIR Takes First Disciplinary Actions Against Immigration Practitioners
In the news release dated August 18, 2000, announcing the immediate suspensions of five attorneys from practicing before the Executive Office for Immigration Review (EOIR) and the Immigration and Naturalization Service, it was noted incorrectly that Milton Dan Kramer had been disbarred by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. He was not disbarred; he was suspended by the Ninth Circuit for 3 years.
The corrected version of the news release will be posted on the EOIR Web site.
- EOIR -