Ohio Approves Applicant with Juvenile Record
The Ohio Supreme Court approved an application to register as a candidate for admission notwithstanding the applicant’s juvenile record
If an applicant has been adjudicated a delinquent child for conduct that would be a felony if committed by an adult, we also consider (1) the amount of time that has passed since that adjudication, (2) whether the rights and privileges forfeited by the adjudication have been restored by operation of law, expungement, or pardon, (3) whether the applicant is disqualified from holding an office of public trust, and (4) how approval of the applicant would impact the public’s perception of or confidence in the legal profession. Gov.Bar R. I(13)(D)(5)(a).
The conduct that caused Lenarz to be adjudicated delinquent occurred in September 2013 when he was 17 years old and a senior in high school. He was placed on probation until the age of 21, which he served without incident. He was released from all supervision in October 2016, and his juvenile adjudication was later sealed and expunged.
After graduating from high school, Lenarz attended Muskingum University, where he often took 18 credit hours per semester and worked 20 or more hours per week to help support his family. He graduated from college in less than four years with a triple major and in the top 5 percent of his class. Lenarz fully disclosed the September 2, 2013 incident in his law-school application. In a statement that accompanied that application, Lenarz stated:
I will live my entire life with the shame of this incident, but I refuse to let it define me. This event has greatly impacted me and it has taught me many lessons. These lessons gave me my work ethic and outlook on life and have made me the student and the person that I am today.
Several of Lenarz’s college professors responded to inquiries from the National Conference of Bar Examiners and offered favorable evidence of his character and fitness to practice law. One professor identified him as an exceptional person with a great work ethic. A second professor noted that Lenarz is a young man of “exceptional character” who “overcame great personal hardship and emerged as one of our top students.” A third professor, who taught Lenarz in four classes and supervised his senior research project, wrote a lengthy comment highlighting his academic achievements, analytical and writing ability, leadership skills, and “intellectual maturity and promise.”
Two attorneys who supervised Lenarz’s externship at their law office also offered positive assessments of his character. At the hearing before the panel, one of those attorneys testified that Lenarz had been open and honest throughout his tenure at the firm and that he was willing to ask for help when he needed it. The attorney stated that he had no concerns about Lenarz’s character or truthfulness and that he believed Lenarz would be “an excellent person to act in this profession.” The second attorney to testify on Lenarz’s behalf before the panel reported that Lenarz conducted himself in a professional manner, performed excellent research, and “would absolutely have [the] character and fitness” to practice law.
Notably, one of the attorneys who interviewed Lenarz on behalf of the local bar association was Judge John Nau—the judge who presided over Lenarz’s juvenile-delinquency proceedings. In his report, the judge commented that Lenarz was “open and I believe honest about the incident. Accepted responsibility. If anything I feel the incident and how the applicant responded to it is overall a plus.”
(Mike Frisch)