Ethics

Lawyer gets suspension after slapping attorney in front of courthouse

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Connecticut lawyer altercation screenshot

A Connecticut lawyer has received a suspension for slapping another attorney in front of a courthouse and for a separate “destructive and harmful campaign of harassing behavior” against a former friend. (Screenshot via News 12 Connecticut’s viewer video)

A Connecticut lawyer has received a suspension for slapping another attorney in front of a courthouse and for a separate “destructive and harmful campaign of harassing behavior” against a former friend.

Lawyer Robert Serafinowicz of Connecticut will be suspended for one year, without the need to apply for readmission to the bar, provided that he continue treatment with mental health professionals and follow their recommendations for five years.

Serafinowicz told the ABA Journal and a reporter with Hearst Connecticut that he won’t appeal the suspension decision issued Friday by Connecticut Judge Barbara Bellis.

“Based on everything, I thought it was a fair disposition,” he told the Journal.

The Hearst Connecticut story was published by the Connecticut Post and the New Haven Register.

Serafinowicz received a suspended sentence in November 2023 in the criminal case stemming from the slapping incident. He had pleaded no contest to third-degree assault for slapping lawyer Edward Gavin outside the Derby, Connecticut, courthouse in September 2022.

The slap caused a contusion and bleeding from Gavin’s ear.

Before the assault, Serafinowicz had spoken with Gavin only once, about nine years earlier, Bellis said in her decision. At that time, Gavin spoke with Serafinowicz as a representative of the Connecticut Criminal Defense Lawyers Association regarding his remarks about a judge. Those disparaging remarks, made in a media interview on the courthouse steps, had resulted in a 120-day suspension for Serafinowicz retroactive to November 2015.

Serafinowicz told the Journal in 2022 that Gavin had been making snide remarks about the situation for years. Serafinowicz said he asked Gavin to apologize before he slapped him. In an audio clip, Serafinowicz can be heard saying, “No, I’m not calming down; this is all coming out, and everybody knows that. And I got a f- - -ing list. Do you want to talk s- - - in front of me now? Do you want to f- - -ing apologize?”

Serafinowicz’s harassment campaign against a former friend, “Stacy B.,” took place the same year that he slapped Gavin. According to Bellis, the harassing behavior included posting attack videos online, as well as sending texts and emails. He pleaded no contest to stalking and harassment in January 2024 and received a suspended sentence.

Serafinowicz described himself as “incredibly depressed” and “in a dark place” when he slapped Gavin, Bellis said. He began seeing a counselor for anxiety and depression and made “considerable progress.”

Bellis said Stacy B. and Gavin “suffered serious, actual harm” in the form of “personal and professional distress” as a result of Serafinowicz’s conduct. Gavin also sustained physical harm.

A mitigating factor, however, was that Serafinowicz was suffering “significant personal and emotional problems” at the time of the incidents, Bellis said. During an ethics hearing, he expressed “genuine remorse, embarrassment, acceptance and contrition” for his conduct.

The apology, offered in front of Gavin, “was not the first time that the respondent appeared remorseful and apologetic when faced with discipline,” Bellis said. But it is the first time that Serafinowicz “has offered a public apology from a place of stable mental health and clarity.”

Serafinowicz has advice for other lawyers with mental health problems.

“To all the other lawyers out there who run into issues, there’s help out there, and you will be glad to get it,” he says.

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