A small firm employs several associates who work under the supervision of the partners, as well as three clerical staff. The most recently hired associate has a complicated situation with his license to practice law. The associate graduated from an accredited law school, successfully passed the state bar exam, and applied for admission to the bar, believing he had met all the eligibility requirements. He had no criminal record or history of academic misconduct, or any other problems meeting the traditional character and fitness requirements. The state bar approved his application and he attended his swearing-in ceremony. The state legislature, however, had recently passed a statute creating the option of a legislative veto for lawyers seeking admission to practice law in the state. The sponsors of the enactment had stated that its purpose was to prevent the grown children of illegal immigrants from becoming lawyers, even though the bar applicant might be a United States citizen “just because they happened to be born here.” The associate was born in Arizona one month after his parents had moved there illegally from a country in Central America. A staff member of the relevant legislative committee flagged the associate’s name from a list of recent bar licensees, along with three others in his situation. During a special session of the legislature, the state legislature exercised the equivalent of a legislative veto, narrowly passing a special act that permanently disbarred the associate and the others for the sole reason that their parents were illegal aliens. The associate received official notice of his disbarment from the Office of Legislative Counsel, not from the state bar. This occurred one week after the associate’s swearing-in ceremony by the state bar, and two days after he started working at the firm. A notice of the disbarments appeared in the next issue of the state bar journal, but most of the firm was unaware of the situation, except for one managing partner in whom the associate had confided. Could the partners at the firm be subject to discipline for employing the associate as an attorney, despite challenging any such discipline in court?
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