Reprinted from ABA Journal
Lawyer charged with phone harassment after his jet was
repossessed and his partner tweeted resignation
https://www.abajournal.com/news/article/lawyer-charged-with-phone-harassment-his-jet-has-been-repossessed-and-his-partner-tweeted-his-resignation
FEBRUARY 10, 2021, 12:16 PM CST
Prominent San Antonio lawyer Martin Phipps is facing a
criminal misdemeanor charge and complaints by a former law partner who resigned
on Twitter.
Phipps, 51, was arrested Monday on a misdemeanor charge of
telephone harassment. He was accused of sending more than 40 electronic
messages to a woman who fled to Mexico, allegedly because she feared for her
life, according to an arrest warrant and sources cited by KENS5,
the San
Antonio Express-News, KSAT and Law360.
Phipps owns a swanky rooftop bar above his law office, the
San Antonio Express-News reports. His firm is one of two firms representing
Bexar County in a lawsuit against manufacturers and distributors of opioid
drugs.
The woman who fled to Mexico returned to San Antonio to seek
an annulment, the warrant says. The San Antonio Express-News examined marriage
records and discovered that Phipps married his then-legal assistant Brenda Vega
on Dec. 19. She received an annulment 34 days later after filing a petition
that was amended to include Phipps as a petitioner. Vega alleged that she
entered into the marriage under duress.
Phipps’ former partner T.J. Mayes tweeted his resignation in
late January, Law360 reported
last month. Mayes resigned after filing complaints against Phipps with the Texas
Bar, the Texas attorney general’s office and the U.S. Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission, according to Law360.
In the ethics complaint, Mayes alleged improper use of
funds, “psychological abuse” of Vega, and possible “mental illness and substance
use disorder.” Mayes said he waited to report the alleged misconduct “until I
could take a series of steps to protect the physical safety of my family and my
former colleagues, including speaking to multiple law enforcement agencies.”
Another story, by the San
Antonio Business Journal, reported that a subsidiary of PNC Bank
repossessed Phipps’ private jet after he allegedly defaulted on the loan, resulting
in a legal fight over how much money the bank gets to keep from the sale.
Gabe Ortiz, an attorney at Phipps’ law firm, told Law360
that he didn’t see the kind of behavior alleged by Mayes. But Ortiz told the
publication that “high stakes litigation like that can be stressful, and it’s
not necessarily meant for everybody. And if this is your first exposure to
litigation, it can be an eye-opener.”’
In a statement to KENS5, Ortiz said the firm “denies the
unsubstantiated allegations” by Mayes.
No comments:
Post a Comment