
Lawyers resign from Jerry Brown lawsuit?
Dana Reed tipped me to Bill Bradley’s recent post on New West Notes that “the law firm” that represented Plaintiffs in the case to disqualify Jerry Brown as Attorney General has apparently resigned. I am on vacation in San Francisco and will check this out with the court in Sacramento on Monday. Readers will recall that the case, originally brought just before the November general election by a group of GOP volunteers led by Contra Costa GOP Chair Tom Del Becarro, sought to disqualify Brown as a candidate for Attorney General on the grounds that he did not meet the “black letter” statutory requirements to serve as Attorney General because he shifted his bar dues status to “inactive” for a period of time while he served as Mayor of Oakland, and was therefore technically not praticing law for a continuous period before his election as Attorney General. Brown, however, has been a lawyer for over 40 years. As a former Secretary of State and Governor, there really isn’t any question about his ability to serve as Attorney General, regardless of what one thinks about his politics.
I think the original lawsuit, in which the… Read More