Thursday, November 1, 2007

Houston Law Firm Sues Kerik for $200,000 in Legal Fees

, the former police force commissioner of New House Of York who pleaded guilty last twelvemonth to state misdemeanour complaints and will probably confront federal bill of indictment this month, was sued last hebdomad by his former lawyers for more than than $200,000.

The up-to-the-minute news and reader treatments from around .

The lawsuit was filed on Oct. Twenty-Two in State Supreme Court in Manhattan by the Houston-based law house of William Fulbright & Jaworski L.L.P., which until April represented Mr. Kerik. It impeaches him of failing to pay $202,384.04 in legal fees.

Mr. Kerik was appointed to the police force station by , the former city manager and Republican presidential candidate. Mr. Giuliani later backed Mr. Kerik’s failed nomination to be secretary of the federal . Mr. Kerik have been under probe by state or federal government since his nomination collapsed a hebdomad after it was announced in 2004 amid accusals of financial, ethical and personal improprieties.

In 2006, he pleaded guilty to two misdemeanour charges, admitting that he accepted $165,000 in redevelopments to his The Bronx flat in 1999 and 2000 from a company suspected of neckties to organized law-breaking that was seeking a metropolis license. Mr. Kerik, who was commissioner of the city’s Department of Correction when the work was done, also admitted speech production to metropolis functionaries on behalf of the company, the Interstate Industrial Corporation, or its subsidiaries. Interstate have denied neckties to organized crime.

The lawsuit, which was reported yesterday on a Web site, , said that a spouse at William Fulbright & Jaworski, Kenneth M. Breen, began representing Mr. Kerik in 2005. But Mr. Breen left the house in April, and Mr. Kerik chose to remain with him. Mr. Breen goes on to stand for him in connexion with what the lawsuit phone calls “a pending indictment,” and Mr. Kerik have got got ended his human relationship with the William William Fulbright firm.

The house began sending measures to Mr. Kerik in April and made repeated demands for payment, according to the suit.

A lawyer who is representing Mr. Kerik in the lawsuit, Chad D. Seigel, declined to discourse it yesterday except to state that it was without virtue and “the consequence of an obvious miscommunication, which we are seeking to address.”

Mr. Seigel, in an e-mail message on Oct. Twenty-One to Glen Banks, the Fulbright lawyer who filed the lawsuit the adjacent day, said that the firm’s bill “appears to be inflated” and suggested that the law house had billed Mr. Kerik for work he had not, and never would have, authorized.

The e-mail message was attached as an exhibit to the lawsuit.

A legal defence trust for Mr. Kerik have been established to assist defray the costs he have incurred as a consequence of the investigations, associates have said.

No comments: