The State Bar Association of North Dakota Fall 2015 Gavel Magazine | Page 9

INSIDE THE PRACTICE OF LAW RESULTS OF THE 2014 SURVEY OF VIOLENCE BY STEPHEN KELSON Stephen Kelson is an attorney and mediator at the law firm of Christensen & Jensen, P.C. in Salt Lake City, Utah, where his practice focuses on civil and commercial litigation. Kelson has published numerous articles on topics related to legal professionalism and professional liability issues, and is a frequent presenter on professional legal topics. For more than a decade, he has studied, documented and conducted statewide surveys regarding violence against the legal profession and methods to prevent work-place violence. In 2014, media agencies reported numerous sensational acts of violence against the legal profession. For example, in North Carolina, a man drove a burning truck, loaded with propane tanks and gasoline, into the law office of his girlfriend’s attorney. In Alabama, a city attorney was shot in the chest while at his office. In Florida, a Florida State University law school professor was shot and killed at home. In Tennessee, a former attorney was killed and his wife injured by a package bomb left at their residence. In Delaware, a man attempted to hire an undercover detective to kill his former defense counsel and a prosecutor. In New York, a corporate attorney, while in court, hit opposing counsel in the face and chest with his briefcase, requiring the victim to undergo back surgery. In Illinois, a woman plotted to kill a town attorney. While none of these incidents occurred in North Dakota, it doesn’t mean that members of the North Dakota legal profession are immune from work-related threats and violence. The legal profession is left to wonder whether the practice of law is actually becoming more violent or if violent acts are simply more publicized when they occur. To better evaluate and understand the degree of threats and violence against attorneys at the state level, from October 27, 2014 through November 24, 2014, all active, in-state members of the North Dakota legal profession were invited to participate in a privately conducted on-line survey regarding violence and threats of violence they have experienced in the practice of law. This article provides a brief summary of the responses to the 2014 survey (the “Survey”) and a glimpse into work-related threats and violence experienced, but rarely discussed, by members of the North Dakota legal profession. Statewide Studies of Violence Against the Legal Profession To date, 13 other statewide surveys have been conducted regarding violence against the legal profession. Their results provide surprising details of violence and threats of violence experienced by attorneys related to the practice of law, the overwhelming majority of which have never been publicly reported. Acts of violence reported by attorneys in these 13 surveys include assaults and batteries, as well as vandalism to attorneys’ businesses and personal property. Many threats of violence include phone calls, written letters, emails, texts, on-line posts, verbal threats of physical violence and death threats, and even attempts to hire individuals to kill attorneys. The results of each of these surveys reveal that violence and threats of violence against the legal profession are far more prevalent than reported by the media or commonly perceived by practitioners. The Survey of Violence Against the North Dakota Legal Profession The Survey was conducted independently by the author, \