What I've been looking for is some sort of sign that Rekieta is starting to lean on this Kezhaya guy's firm for cheaper representation.
Went a bit down the road and found a lot of things of interest. Here was my journey:
My initial thought just generally was - It would make sense. Also found it interesting that that firm has addresses in Minneapolis and in Rogers, Arkansas. [figured out why, below, but their whole structure is dodgy]
A search of admitted lawyers in MN shows a Matt but no other Kezhayas. His office address in MN is different than on the website.
Also noted that though he represents clients he apparently does not carry malpractice insurance, per the official record (not required in MN, though disclosure of whether or not you do is). Most do, but see:
Based upon data collected in Minnesota as of August 2019, of the 12,995 lawyers who disclosed on their annual registration that they represent private clients, 10,715 (82.45 percent) disclosed they carry liability insurance, leaving 17.55 percent uncovered. Due to data limitations, we do not know the types of practices those uninsured lawyers maintain. Are they solo or small firm practitioners? Do they mainly handle personal claims for individual legal consumers? Illinois estimates that as many as 40 percent of solo lawyers are uninsured. In a 2017 survey in Washington, 28 percent of solo practitioners reported being uninsured.5
I was curious to see if there was any correlation between uninsured lawyers and discipline, so we pulled some quick numbers. Just looking at 2019 public discipline: Of the 25 lawyers publicly disciplined this year, only 8 (32 percent) reported carrying insurance when they last updated their annual registration. Because Minnesota does not retain malpractice disclosure information year over year, we were unable to look at whether the attorney carried coverage at the time of the misconduct.
Another interesting but perhaps not surprising statistic is that solo and small firm practitioners represent a disproportionate share of malpractice claims, according to the ABA Profile of Legal Malpractice Claims (2012-2015).6 For that period, insurers who participated in the survey reported that 34 percent of claims were against solo practitioners and 32 percent were against firms with two to five lawyers, for a total of over 65 percent of claims against firms with five or fewer lawyers! From a public protection perspective, this is not a comforting story: The segment of lawyers with the highest percentage of malpractice claims against them also report a higher lack of insurance.
Maybe if the bulk of what he does is being local counsel/sponsoring, research, admin, he doesn’t have a high risk of malpractice. Then again, as Rekieta well knows, minor administrative errors
like failing to file things timely or accurately can lead to real fuck-ups.
Oh, wait:
I forgot that was
this guy. (He’s been written about on KF before so this may somewhat repeat prior posts.)
He
really should get malpractice insurance, though maybe at this point he can’t or it’s cost-prohibitive (see the order to show cause, above, for concerns about his practice, and as you’ll see below, that wasn’t his only issue).
The Crown site doesn’t currently mention the satanic temple stuff*. And the bios have been changed quite a bit since last year. They are currently standard bland and factual firm site bios, whereas bios on prior versions of the site were…amusing:
Matt:
As for Sonia, the current Crown site bio says she was previously with “the top Fortune 500 company,” doing compliance work. That was Wal-mart. Both Kezhayas appear to be from or at least have gone to school in Arkansas.
Sonia on LinkedIn:
https://www.linkedin.com/in/skezhaya
Odd, her LinkedIn says Kezhaya Law, PLC, not Crown.
Sonia’s prior Crown bio (lol)
Their firm(s) structure/operations are … interesting. As mentioned, Sonia’s LinkedIn identifies Kezhaya Law as her place of business.
In Arkansas, Kezhaya Law exists/existed, shows as $953k* revenue and 5 employees. *grain of salt, as this is just one of those random corporate database site
Kezhaya Law has been set up in both Arkansas and MN (in a couple different iterations) and Crown Law appears in MN.
Kezhaya Law is
in good standing not in good standing in Arkansas, with Crown in MN identified as a “branch.” This site apparently has outdated info, but a lot of history and governance-related:
https://opencorporates.com/companies/us_ar/811117725
and related:
https://opencorporates.com/companies/us_mn/82f0fe10-5f79-ec11-91b7-00155d32b93a and
A check of the Arkansas SOS shows a Kezhaya Law PLC (“not current”) and a Kezhaya Law PLLC (“dissolved”).
https://www.ark.org/corp-search/index.php/corps/results
In MN:
Kezhaya Law (with a different office address than either the one on the Crown site or on Matt’s info with the Lawyer Reg’n site):
Crown Law (with ANOTHER office address):
https://mblsportal.sos.state.mn.us/...lingGuid=a92e6abb-6973-ed11-9065-00155d01c614
Other misc items noted:
*Now, organizational dodginess aside (which dodginess is likely related to the below/standard of practice indicated by the below), here’s the real meat about Nick’s choice of representation:
The Satanic Temple v Hellerstedt suit, for which Kezhaya represented the plaintiff , terminated this past June, having
failed to survive a motion to dismiss. The linked decision is a treat. The Court repeatedly slammed the quality of the complaints (there were
3 amended complaints!):
“39. All of this was towards giving Plaintiffs the chance to replead and bring forward the best possible version of their claims. Yet they proceeded on that post-Dobbs opportunity to submit an exceedingly thin complaint, one far more diminutive than prior versions.”
It gets better! (Sorry for funky spacing/c&p from a pdf (the one linked above) in a scrolling window)
Given the detail of the prior complaints and these substantial changes in the law, the deficiencies in the operative complaint are no doubt intentional. And indeed, the filing of a willfully deficient amended complaint is of a piece with the mulish litigation conduct by counsel for Plaintiffs, Attorney Matt Kezhaya, in this and other actions representing The Satanic Temple. Recently considered in this regard was whether to revoke his permission to proceed pro hac vice in light of sanctions entered against him in other federal courts after his appearance here. For example, see Satanic Temple Inc v City of Belle Plaine, 2022 WL 1639514 (D Minn)(imposing sanctions for filing frivolous lawsuit); Satanic Temple Inc v City of Boston, 2022 WL 1028925, *6 (D Mass)(imposing sanctions for abusive subpoena practice). Ultimately, pro hac vice status wasn’t revoked. Id at 3. But this doesn’t mean such conduct was found acceptable.
Litigation of constitutional claims is a serious matter. Such issues deserve serious attention from counsel desiring to be taken seriously. As it turns out, Plaintiffs might have been better served by proceeding pro se, as applicable standards would dictate that their filings would be “liberally construed” and “held to less stringent standards than formal pleadings drafted by lawyers.” Erickson v Pardus, 551 US 89, 94 (2007), quoting Estelle v Gamble, 429 US 97, 106 (1976) (cleaned up). Instead, Plaintiffs have mustered on with counsel of their choice, and he does very little to try and assist understanding of what their claims actually are. The exercise of discretion favors dismissal without permission to replead. The above concerns demonstrate undue delay and bad faith. And any repleading at this stage would manifest undue prejudice to a range of current and former Defendants who still have little clue as to the exact nature of the claims brought in this case. The Court is also of the firm belief that any further attempt at repleading would be futile, given that Attorney Kezhaya’s filings become more conclusory, reductive, and intemperate over time, in line with his performative and obstinate conduct to date. The third amended complaint is willfully inadequate and deficient. It fails for jurisdictional reasons and would also likely fail for insufficient pleadingof the merits. Plaintiffs will not be given leave to replead.
“Mulish”
“Kezhaya’s filings became more conclusory, reductive, and intemperate over time.”
“
Performative and obstinate conduct.”
This guy is perfect for Nick. And he’d better be a HUGE bargain with a record like that. Or maybe Nick himself is just a pay-pig, because this attorney is definitely cow-level and we know how that goes.