Star Tribune
Accused of misconduct, attorney Michael Padden argues to Supreme Court that he’s been ‘railroaded’
Longtime Twin Cities attorney Michael Padden told the Minnesota Supreme Court on Wednesday that he was being “railroaded” by the state’s Office of Lawyers Professional Responsibility for recommending he be disbarred for multiple acts of misconduct.
Padden is accused of lying to a judge and clients, misappropriating client funds, forging clients’ name on documents, neglecting client matters, failing to maintain required trust account books and records, failing to make court appearances and not cooperating with the investigation against him. The OLPR made its case to the Minnesota Supreme Court, which will decide Padden’s fate. He argued in his own defense.
“The only appropriate discipline is disbarment,” OLPR Timothy Burke, OLPR attorney.
Padden countered that the accusations were “outrageous,” adding that “I never stole a dime.” He said he only missed some court appearances in 2023 after he lost his cell phone and changed legal assistants. He indicated that the case that had been mounted against him was fraught with inaccurate information, and that a court appointed referee who reviewed the case “rubber stamped” the OLPR findings.
“I did not engage in any unethical conduct,” he said.
The case against him was partly based on claims by clients that Padden had forged their names on documents allowing him to retain their funds under false premises. Padden denied the forgeries. “(The OLPR) didn’t retain a handwriting expert,” Padden said. “How can I defend against that?”
OLPR director Susan Humiston, said in a brief interview after the hearing that the office did not retain a handwriting expert, but said that the court-appointed referee who recommended Padden’s disbarment, “made his determination based upon all of the evidence submitted to him including the testimony of all parties involved.”
Several Supreme Court justices asked questions of both Padden and Burke, including Chief Justice Natalie Hudson. On average, the court issues its decisions 4 1/2 months after oral arguments, but there is no time limit on when it might do so.
Padden and his clients have occasionally been in the headlines, often in cases over allegations of misconduct by police. He represented the family of Terrance Franklin, a 22-year-old Black man killed by Minneapolis police in 2013, and later wrote a book about the case. He defended Diamond Reynolds in an assault case; before that, she became famous for livestreaming the fatal shooting of her boyfriend, Philando Castile, by a St. Anthony police officer in 2016. Padden has been an attorney in Minnesota for 38 years.
In his opening statement, Burke accused Padden of misappropriating “to his own benefit” more than $250,000. “The way he ran his trust account was like a scheme, where he disbursed money from his trust account not as the rules required, but as he needed,”
Rather than misappropriating money from his clients, Padden argued to the Supreme Court, he offered discounts and waived fees to clients, saving them more than $200,000. “Does this sound like a crook?” Padden asked the justices.
One of the central findings against Padden, the court referee concluded, involved his representation of Steven Sweet who was charged with credit card fraud in Wisconsin and had entered a plea agreement under which he pled guilty in exchange for a prosecutorial recommendation of four months in jail. In 2022, while Sweet and his wife were in a Wisconsin hotel blocks from the courthouse before the sentencing, Sweet and his wife alleged Sweet had a phone call from Padden informing him that a pre-sentence investigation came to a harsher conclusion than anticipated and if it were him, he would leave Wisconsin and not return because Wisconsin would not extradite him from out of state. In fact, the presentence investigation recommended a suspended jail sentence.
Sweet said he took Padden’s alleged advice, fled the state. Padden lied to the court, saying he did not know why Sweet fled, according to the court referee. Sweet was arrested and extradited and spent two and a half years in prison.
At Wednesday’s hearing, Padden denied he had made a phone call advising Sweet to abscond. He said that when Sweet was ultimately sentenced and pled guilty, he did not mention the call, evidence that it never happened.
Padden cited a letter from the Wisconsin Office of Lawyer Regulation, that there was “an insufficient basis to proceed” with an investigation into allegations of misconduct by Padden. “Wisconsin determined I did nothing wrong,” Padden said.
Burke countered that the letter came from the Wisconsin office’s intake department, that it was a preliminary evaluation, and there had been no investigation.
“Do you acknowledge any conduct where you were wrong?” Justice Gordon Moore asked Padden. Padden said he had made some “technical violations,” adding, “Your honor, I recognized long ago I made mistakes.”
In a memorandum, Padden said the “appropriate remedy” was to reinstate him “and get back to his former clients who desperately need him.” He recommended he be given a “short course of probation” regarding the trust account transactions. He said the hearings he missed were “a blip in Padden’s long career and is an easy fix for Padden.”
Star Tribune
Investigators searching for additional victims as Hastings man faces child porn charges
A 27-year-old Hastings man has been accused in federal court of producing child pornography over a roughly two-year span, and investigators are trying to identify additional potential victims.
Hunter James Geidlwas charged with four counts of either production or possession of child pornography in federal court Dec. 10. He has pleaded not guilty.
According to the charges, Geidl employed and used minors to engage in sexually explicit conduct for producing explicit videos from July 2022 to March 2024. He is also accused of possessing a video file of pornographic material involving a minor in 2022.
Geidl made his initial appearance in court Friday and remains in custody, according to a statement from U.S. Attorney Andrew Luger.
Investigators believe other minors may have been victimized and ask that if anyone believes their child has been in contact with Geidl to contact the FBI at 1-800-CALL-FBI (800-225-5324) or tips.fbi.gov.
Star Tribune
Replacements guitarist and Minnesota music hero Slim Dunlap dies after long illness
“She was really into the Replacements. So for her to have her dad suddenly playing in the band, it would be like my dad joining the Rolling Stones.”
Slim Dunlap, right, with Paul Westerberg during a 1987 Replacements concert at First Avenue in Minneapolis. (Brian Peterson, Star Tribune/The Minnesota Star Tribune)
Dunlap played guitar on the final two Replacements studio albums, also including 1991’s “All Shook Down.” Westerberg and bassist Tommy Stinson later credited him for sparking a new spirit in the band and extending their run during their waning years.
After the break-up in 1991, Dunlap toured with Dan Baird of the Georgia Satellites, who led the first fundraising campaign on Dunlap’s behalf in the days after his stroke.
Finally, in 1993, Dunlap got his own chance to shine as a singer/songwriter.
He channeled his love for Hank Williams, Chuck Berry and vintage blues alongside the Replacements’ Stones and Faces influences on his debut album, “The Old New Me,” issued by former ‘Mats manager and Twin/Tone Records co-founder Peter Jesperson on the Medium Cool record label. A second solo album came three years later, “Times Like This,” similarly earning a cult-loved status — especially among fellow musicians.
Springsteen publicly raved about those records numerous times, including in a 2014 interview with NPR’s Ann Powers: “I hope I get a chance to cut one of his songs,” said the Boss. “Check out the two Slim Dunlap records, because they’re just beautiful rock ‘n’ roll records. I found them to be deeply touching and emotional.”
Star Tribune
Connexus Energy worker dies after falling from boom truck in central MN
A 59-year-old utility worker died Tuesday after falling from the bucket of a boom truck at a job site north of Big Lake, according to Sherburne County Sheriff’s Office Cmdr. Ben Zawacki.
Thomas L. Stewart of Dayton fell about six to eight feet and suffered significant head injuries while working in the ditch on the north side of 241st Avenue NW, just west of 185th Street in Orrock Township.
First responders performed life-saving efforts at the scene before Stewart was transported to St. Cloud Hospital, where he was pronounced dead late Tuesday.
Stewart worked for the Minnesota-based utility company Connexus Energy. In a response to a Facebook post about the incident, a representative from Connexus thanked people for their thoughts and prayers, and clarified the utility worker was not electrocuted in the incident.
“We’re heartbroken over the passing of our friend and colleague but we are waiting for family and friends to be notified so we cannot share additional information,” Stacy Downs, communications specialist at Connexus, said Wednesday.