A prominent and politically connected South Florida attorney was
being investigated by his own firm for financial irregularities in an
investment business that led his law partner to seek dissolution Monday.
The
attorney, Scott Rothstein, and partner Stuart Rosenfeldt founded the
firm Rothstein Rosenfeldt Adler in 2002. Now Rosenfeldt is seeking to
dissolve their partnership and have the 70-lawyer firm placed into
court-supervised receivership "to minimize any further damage caused by
Mr. Rothstein," according to court documents.
"A review of the
firm's records undertaken this past weekend indicates that various funds
unrelated to the direct practice of law cannot be accounted for,
circumstances suggesting that investor money may have been misused by
Mr. Rothstein who controlled all such accounts," Rosenfeldt said in the
court papers.
A lawyer for some investors, Jeff Sonn, said initial estimates of the missing cash range from $100 million to $185 million.
"Nobody knows for sure," Sonn said.
At
a brief hearing, Circuit Judge Jeffrey Streitfeld put off a decision on
appointing a receiver by a day, in part to find out if Rothstein plans
to return from an undisclosed foreign country to contest the move.
"This
is an extraordinary effort that would have to be undertaken on an
immediate basis," Streitfeld said. "Let's take a deep breath and see
where we're going."
Neither Rothstein nor his attorney immediately
returned telephone calls and e-mails seeking comment. An attorney hired
by Rosenfeldt, former Miami U.S. Attorney Kendall Coffey, said he has
been assured that Rothstein will return to the U.S. Coffey also said he
has notified federal prosecutors about possible criminal wrongdoing at
the firm.
Financial irregularities have become a bigger issue in the legal industry. Leave us your comments and thoughts concerning this topic. We would love to hear your insight!
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