A prominent Twin Cities lawyer has been suspended by the Minnesota Supreme Court and faces possible disbarment for his handling of a series of cases stretching back over a decade.
Among the most egregious allegations made against attorney Michael Padden is that he urged a client in a criminal case in Wisconsin to go on the lam rather than attend his sentencing, and then allegedly lied to a judge about what he told the client.
The client was subsequently arrested and extradited, and spent three years in prison rather than six months under the terms of a plea agreement that had been arranged.
Padden, who has offices in Lake Elmo and is licensed to practice law in Minnesota and Wisconsin, is also accused of misappropriating clients' funds, failing to deposit clients' money in trust accounts as required by state rules and failing to keep proper records.
"It is unusual to have so many violations of the rules on lawyers' professional responsibility," said Joseph Daly, emeritus professor at Mitchell Hamline School of law.
The misconduct allegations against Padden were first disclosed in January 2023 when the Office of Lawyers Professional Responsibility Board (OLPR), a state agency that investigates alleged attorney misconduct and prosecutes disciplinary actions against lawyers, filed a 35-page petition for disciplinary action with the state Supreme Court. Signed by OLPR director Susan Humiston, the petition cited seven counts of alleged misconduct and sought Padden's suspension or disbarment.
In an order issued last week, Associate Supreme Court Justice Margaret Chutich wrote that a referee had found seven violations by Padden under Wisconsin court rules and 22 under Minnesota court rules.
"The referee recommended that [Padden] be disbarred and that he be immediately suspended pending resolution of this disciplinary proceeding," the justice wrote.