Discussion:
U.S. Senator Bill Nelson's Campaign Funded by Thousands of Dollars From Overcharging Law Firm's Principals
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so1oman
2006-04-29 21:14:26 UTC
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JACKSONVILLE, FLA--- U.S. Senator Bill Nelson, the senior Senator from
Florida, is seeking re-election in 2006. Records reveal Nelson's campaign
received thousands of dollars in contributions in the years 2003 through
2005 from the principals of a Jacksonville law firm who admit it overcharged
its personal injury clients by $130,000 around the same period.

The law firm in question is FARAH, FARAH & ABBOTT, P.A. (a/k/a The Law
Offices of Eddie Farah). According to the firm's web site, it is now known
as the Law Offices of Farah & Farah, P.A. The principals in the firm are
Eddie Farah and his brother, Charlie ("Chuck") E. Farah.

The Law Offices of Eddie Farah employed Florida attorney Jeffrey R. Hill in
2004 when he discovered it was regularly overcharging its personal injury
clients by substantial sums. Hill says, "The firm was often 'padding' costs
charged to clients by $300 or more per case and had been doing so for
several years. Clients were required to sign settlement statements
certifying they agreed with the falsified figures before any portion of
their settlement funds would be paid to them. The firm's fee contracts,
accounting records and settlement statements clearly document its
overcharging practices."

Attorneys admit this law firm overcharged clients by $130,000 in the years
2002 through 2004. John A. Weiss, Esq. of Tallahassee represented Eddie and
Chuck Farah, before the Bar. Weiss admitted the firm's overcharges in a
Sept. 22, 2005 letter to The Bar stating,

"As an aside, I would advise you that the firm has refunded in excess of
$120,000.00 ... to those clients who were inadvertently overcharged for
costs. Approximately $10,000.00 remains undisbursed because the firm, and
the private investigator it subsequently hired, could not find the
individuals."

Hill observes, "That certainly sounds like a lot of money to be
'inadvertently' overcharged. The firm would have to overcharge 400 clients
by $300 each to reach $120,000."

Even The Florida Bar's own audit of the firm's trust account confirmed
$130,000 in overcharges and a lack of substantial compliance with Bar rules
governing trust acounts in the years 2002 through 2004.

Certified Public Accountant and Certified Fraud Examiner James F. Wells
prepared the report following his audit of Farah's trust account records and
procedures. Wells' Audit Report noted,

"Administrative costs that were not substantiated by documentary evidence
were charged on some settlement statements in personal injury cases. These
administrative costs were in excess of the documented costs such as copies,
faxes and postage. Rule 5-1.2(b)(4) requires documentary support for all
disbursements from the trust account. These costs were not authorized by the
clients."

In discussing corrective action taken, Wells stated,

"The firm reviewed client files and settlement statements to determine the
specific clients that had been charged unsubstantiated administrative costs.
Refunds totaling approximately $130,000, including interest, were issued to
those clients."

Wells concluded,

"In my opinion, Mr. Farah's trust accounting records and procedures in
connection with the documentation of costs paid from trust funds during the
period from January 1, 2002 through December 31, 2004 were not in
substantial compliance with The Florida Bar's rules governing trust
accounts." (Emphasis supplied).

Online records show Nelson's campaign received
$2,500 each from Eddie Farah and Chuck Farah on Jun. 6, 2005 for a total of
$5,000 that year. Eddie Farah had apparently also contributed $1,000 to
Nelson's 2004 campaign on Dec. 9, 2003. Records for 2004 and 2006 campaigns
show the Farah brothers contributed thousands of dollars more to Federal
Democratic candidates John Kerry, Betty Castor, Patrick Leahy, Corrine Brown
and Debbie Stabenow.

The source of the funds contributed by the Farahs remains in question.

Copyright © 2006 by Jeffrey R. Hill. All rights reserved.

******************************************************************************************************************************
"Hill's Peek at Lawyer Misconduct":
"http://home.comcast.net/~email4hill/wsb/index.html

"Regulating Lawyer Misconduct in Florida: Who's Responsible?":
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so1oman
2006-05-04 20:33:31 UTC
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<a
href="http://www.campaignmoney.com/finance.asp?type=in&cycle=06&criteria=farah">
Online records</a> show attorney Eddie Farah of FARAH & FARAH, P.A.
contributed an additional $10,000 to Nelson's campaign on 12/12/05.
Post by so1oman
JACKSONVILLE, FLA--- U.S. Senator Bill Nelson, the senior Senator from
Florida, is seeking re-election in 2006. Records reveal Nelson's campaign
received thousands of dollars in contributions in the years 2003 through
2005 from the principals of a Jacksonville law firm who admit it
overcharged its personal injury clients by $130,000 around the same
period.
The law firm in question is FARAH, FARAH & ABBOTT, P.A. (a/k/a The Law
Offices of Eddie Farah). According to the firm's web site, it is now known
as the Law Offices of Farah & Farah, P.A. The principals in the firm are
Eddie Farah and his brother, Charlie ("Chuck") E. Farah.
The Law Offices of Eddie Farah employed Florida attorney Jeffrey R. Hill
in 2004 when he discovered it was regularly overcharging its personal
injury clients by substantial sums. Hill says, "The firm was often
'padding' costs charged to clients by $300 or more per case and had been
doing so for several years. Clients were required to sign settlement
statements certifying they agreed with the falsified figures before any
portion of their settlement funds would be paid to them. The firm's fee
contracts, accounting records and settlement statements clearly document
its overcharging practices."
Attorneys admit this law firm overcharged clients by $130,000 in the years
2002 through 2004. John A. Weiss, Esq. of Tallahassee represented Eddie
and Chuck Farah, before the Bar. Weiss admitted the firm's overcharges in
a Sept. 22, 2005 letter to The Bar stating,
"As an aside, I would advise you that the firm has refunded in excess of
$120,000.00 ... to those clients who were inadvertently overcharged for
costs. Approximately $10,000.00 remains undisbursed because the firm, and
the private investigator it subsequently hired, could not find the
individuals."
Hill observes, "That certainly sounds like a lot of money to be
'inadvertently' overcharged. The firm would have to overcharge 400 clients
by $300 each to reach $120,000."
Even The Florida Bar's own audit of the firm's trust account confirmed
$130,000 in overcharges and a lack of substantial compliance with Bar
rules governing trust acounts in the years 2002 through 2004.
Certified Public Accountant and Certified Fraud Examiner James F. Wells
prepared the report following his audit of Farah's trust account records
and procedures. Wells' Audit Report noted,
"Administrative costs that were not substantiated by documentary evidence
were charged on some settlement statements in personal injury cases. These
administrative costs were in excess of the documented costs such as
copies, faxes and postage. Rule 5-1.2(b)(4) requires documentary support
for all disbursements from the trust account. These costs were not
authorized by the clients."
In discussing corrective action taken, Wells stated,
"The firm reviewed client files and settlement statements to determine the
specific clients that had been charged unsubstantiated administrative
costs. Refunds totaling approximately $130,000, including interest, were
issued to those clients."
Wells concluded,
"In my opinion, Mr. Farah's trust accounting records and procedures in
connection with the documentation of costs paid from trust funds during
the period from January 1, 2002 through December 31, 2004 were not in
substantial compliance with The Florida Bar's rules governing trust
accounts." (Emphasis supplied).
Online records show Nelson's campaign received
$2,500 each from Eddie Farah and Chuck Farah on Jun. 6, 2005 for a total
of $5,000 that year. Eddie Farah had apparently also contributed $1,000 to
Nelson's 2004 campaign on Dec. 9, 2003. Records for 2004 and 2006
campaigns show the Farah brothers contributed thousands of dollars more to
Federal Democratic candidates John Kerry, Betty Castor, Patrick Leahy,
Corrine Brown and Debbie Stabenow.
The source of the funds contributed by the Farahs remains in question.
Copyright © 2006 by Jeffrey R. Hill. All rights reserved.
******************************************************************************************************************************
"http://home.comcast.net/~email4hill/wsb/index.html
http://lawyermisconduct.blogspot.com/
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