Amended November 12, 2015 Iowa Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary Board v. Frank Santiago ( 2015 )


Menu:
  •               IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
    No. 15–0024
    Filed September 4, 2015
    Amended November 12, 2015
    IOWA SUPREME COURT ATTORNEY DISCIPLINARY BOARD,
    Appellee,
    vs.
    FRANK SANTIAGO,
    Appellant.
    On appeal from the report of the Grievance Commission of the
    Supreme Court of Iowa.
    The grievance commission reports that an attorney violated several
    rules of professional conduct and recommends a sixty-day suspension.
    LICENSE SUSPENDED.
    Frank Santiago, Iowa City, pro se.
    Charles L. Harrington and Wendell J. Harms, Des Moines, for
    appellee.
    2
    WATERMAN, Justice.
    The Iowa Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary Board brought a
    complaint against Frank Santiago, charging him with violating Iowa
    disciplinary rules in connection with his representation of one client and
    his failure to follow trust account procedures.        A division of the
    Grievance Commission of the Supreme Court of Iowa found he violated
    several rules by failing to deposit an advance fee into his trust account,
    maintain proper trust account records, account for withdrawals, and
    communicate his hourly rate. The commission recommended a sixty-day
    suspension, noting as an aggravating factor his failure to correct his
    bookkeeping practices after a 2011 audit. Santiago admits he violated
    the trust account rules but argues the sanction should be no more than
    a public reprimand.       He argues the attorney who reported his
    misconduct did so out of spite, and his work for underserved, non-
    English speaking clientele merits greater consideration to mitigate the
    sanction. On our de novo review, we find Santiago violated the rules and
    suspend his license to practice law for thirty days.
    I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
    Santiago has practiced law in Iowa since 1995.      He is a solo
    practitioner with an office in Iowa City, concentrating in personal injury
    and criminal defense cases.       He frequently represents non-English
    speaking Hispanic residents. He has no prior disciplinary record, but a
    2011 audit of his practice found numerous shortcomings in his
    bookkeeping and violations of the trust account rules. The 2011 auditor
    assisted him in complying with record keeping requirements but he failed
    to take the lessons to heart. This case arose from his representation of
    one client and the resulting complaint, and the audit conducted in 2013–
    2014.
    3
    A. The 2011 Audit.      The Client Security Commission audited
    Santiago’s trust account in 2011.        The auditor, Thomas McGarvey,
    examined Santiago’s trust account statements from February to August
    of 2011. McGarvey testified at the 2014 grievance commission hearing
    that the rules require attorneys to perform a three-way reconciliation of
    the trust account on a monthly basis and that Santiago had not
    performed the required reconciliation since 2007. Santiago admitted to
    McGarvey he had not been reconciling his account before the audit as
    required by the rules, but claimed he regularly performed his own review
    of the trust account.     Santiago produced his bank statements for
    McGarvey, but had no check register or client ledger to cross-check the
    bank statements and lacked documentation for some transactions. The
    bank    statements   showed    Santiago    had   made   prohibited   cash
    withdrawals from the trust account.            McGarvey testified at the
    commission hearing that Santiago’s personal review procedure was
    inadequate because it would not show when he failed to make trust
    account deposits. McGarvey also reported that Santiago made no written
    accountings to criminal clients when he withdrew funds from the trust
    account.   Instead, Santiago simply withdrew retainer funds from the
    trust account after performing the work without notifying the clients or
    identifying the clients for each withdrawal.
    McGarvey scheduled a follow-up appointment with Santiago in
    November of 2011.       He found the records in better shape, which
    McGarvey attributed to the hiring of a new employee. However, Santiago
    still had not completed a check register, one of the elements necessary
    for a monthly reconciliation. McGarvey explained the need for individual
    client ledgers to use in reconciling the accounts each month. He showed
    Santiago how to complete the required reconciliations.         McGarvey
    4
    testified he saw no evidence in his review that Santiago misappropriated
    client funds or acted dishonestly in his bookkeeping.       No disciplinary
    complaint was brought against Santiago as a result of the 2011 audit.
    B. Moreno Representation. In early January 2013, Santiago met
    with   Joseph    Moreno   and   agreed   to   represent   him   in   criminal
    proceedings.    Moreno faced charges for intimidation with a dangerous
    weapon, reckless use of a firearm, criminal mischief in the first degree,
    burglary in the first degree, carrying weapons, and operating a motor
    vehicle while intoxicated (OWI), first offense. According to court filings,
    Moreno, while severely intoxicated, pointed a loaded Glock 9 mm, semi-
    automatic handgun at his roommate.            Moreno fired shots in their
    apartment, drove to Coral Ridge Mall, and crashed his Ford Explorer
    through the glass entrance doors at Scheels All Sports. He then ran to
    the upper level of the store, smashed the glass case containing
    ammunition, and passed out there before his arrest by a SWAT team.
    Moreno paid Santiago $100 for the initial one-hour conference and
    agreed to pay Santiago $5000 to seek an acceptable plea agreement. On
    January 3, Moreno gave Santiago $2500 in cash as a retainer. Santiago
    admittedly never placed that cash retainer in his trust account and,
    instead, put it in a drawer in his office.       Santiago gave Moreno a
    handwritten receipt on the back of a business card but never discussed
    his hourly rate with Moreno or entered into a written fee agreement.
    Santiago filed his appearance for Moreno in the criminal cases on
    January 4.     According to Santiago, he also advised Moreno on several
    matters ancillary to the criminal charges, including a restraining order
    5
    preventing Moreno from entering his apartment, 1 Moreno’s status with
    the National Guard, and Moreno’s employment with Mercy Hospital.
    Santiago also discussed Moreno’s case with the assistant county
    attorney, interviewed witnesses, and performed legal research, all
    without memorializing his work.      By interviewing Moreno’s roommate,
    Santiago learned that he claimed Moreno had forcibly marched him into
    the apartment at gunpoint and ordered him to lie down and count to a
    thousand, before firing shots into a wall. Santiago noted this information
    was not in the minutes of testimony and would support a charge of
    kidnapping, a forcible felony.    Therefore, Santiago sought a quick plea
    agreement to forestall that additional felony charge.
    Meanwhile, in early February, Moreno contacted Cedar Rapids
    attorney Maria Victoria Cole and met with her on February 25.             On
    March 7, Moreno decided to dismiss Santiago and retain Cole to
    represent him.      The record is silent about Moreno’s reasons for
    substituting counsel.    Cole called Santiago that day and left him a
    voicemail.   According to Cole, she informed Santiago that Moreno had
    retained her and requested that Santiago provide Moreno a final
    accounting of his work and return any unused retainer funds. According
    to Santiago, Cole demanded the entire $2500 retainer in a threatening
    manner and did not claim to act as Moreno’s attorney. Cole followed the
    voicemail with a letter to Santiago dated March 8 informing Santiago of
    her appearance as counsel for Moreno.
    1Santiago’s office was in the same building as Moreno’s apartment, which
    Moreno was prohibited from visiting under the terms of his pretrial release.
    Santiago prepared a motion to amend the pretrial release conditions to allow
    Moreno to meet with Santiago in his office. Santiago also arranged with the
    landlord to permit Moreno to retrieve his belongings.
    6
    Santiago said he “knew the situation wasn’t going to be good” as
    soon as he heard Cole’s voice because he believed she carried a grudge
    from a case they litigated ten years earlier.     In 2003, Cole was the
    assistant county attorney prosecuting Santiago’s client, Raynaro Pirtle,
    on charges of possession of marijuana. See State v. Pirtle, No. 03–1655,
    
    2005 WL 67524
    (Iowa Ct. App. Jan. 13, 2005).          Santiago and Cole’s
    recollections differ. According to Santiago, at the conclusion of the trial,
    he asked the judge to inform the jurors that Santiago may contact them.
    After the judge left the courtroom, Santiago remembers Cole pointing at
    him and saying, “[I]f you bother those jurors, I will prosecute you, too.”
    Santiago said he complained to Cole’s boss, Johnson County Attorney
    Patrick White, about a credible threat of prosecution, and as a result of
    his complaint, Cole received a written reprimand for the incident.       By
    contrast, Cole remembered the trial and a conversation with Santiago
    about harassing jurors, but she denied threatening to prosecute Santiago
    and denied any knowledge of a subsequent complaint or reprimand from
    White.   White, called by Santiago to testify at the 2014 grievance
    commission hearing, lacked any recollection of reprimanding Cole, and
    no written reprimand of Cole appears in the record.       Cole denied she
    carried any grudge against Santiago from the Pirtle case and maintained
    she had a cordial relationship with Santiago since that trial.
    Santiago, at Cole’s request, promptly provided her with CDs of
    police interviews, but he was much slower at providing the requested
    accounting. On March 20, Moreno called Santiago to get the accounting.
    Santiago told him he was tied up in a trial, and Moreno agreed the
    accounting could wait until after the trial.       Santiago delivered his
    accounting to Moreno on April 10 with a letter stating he had reduced his
    usual hourly rate of $200 to $150 for Moreno and claimed 28.5 hours of
    7
    work for a total fee of $4275.       Santiago offered to waive the $1775
    balance he claimed Moreno owed him.
    In response, Cole drafted a letter on Moreno’s behalf disputing
    Santiago’s hourly rate and time charges.      Cole’s letter, dated May 23,
    argued that Moreno reasonably thought Santiago’s hourly rate was $100
    based on his charge in that amount for the initial one-hour consultation.
    Cole also claimed Santiago inflated his bill by including irrelevant
    matters and excessive time charges.       Specifically, Cole’s letter alleged
    that Santiago should not have charged Moreno for discussions with the
    landlord that she viewed as unrelated to Moreno’s criminal defense and
    that Santiago overcharged Moreno for drafting his appearance and
    withdrawal and sending investigative materials to Cole.           Cole told
    Santiago to hold $1250 in his trust account as disputed funds until the
    matter could be resolved. Cole simultaneously forwarded a copy of her
    letter to the Board.    Santiago responded to Cole’s letter on May 28
    disputing Cole’s complaints but offering $500 to settle the matter.
    Santiago never placed Moreno’s retainer or the disputed $1250 in his
    trust account.
    C. The 2013 Audit.        The Client Security Commission again
    audited Santiago in 2013.     Auditor Gerald Murphy called Santiago on
    September 6, 2013.      Murphy testified the audit was in response to
    Santiago’s answer in his 2013 client security report admitting that he
    had not been reconciling his trust account. According to Murphy’s notes
    of their initial phone call, Santiago made the following statements:
    1. Records are not in order
    2. Girl left him shortly after the last auditor was there
    3. He doesn’t take client money
    4. Just isn’t well organized
    8
    5. Small operator
    6. Does everything himself
    7. Takes in only small retainers
    Murphy forwarded Santiago information on the trust account rules in
    chapter 45 and an article on compliance.
    Murphy visited Santiago’s office on October 14. Santiago admitted
    to Murphy that he had failed to place Moreno’s retainer in the trust
    account but denied failing to deposit any other client’s cash retainers in
    the account. Santiago also admitted he had not provided his criminal
    clients with notice or accounting when he withdrew funds from the trust
    account. Murphy noted Santiago had been making cash withdrawals2
    from the trust account and still had no check register, client ledger
    records, or monthly reconciliations. Murphy started a check register for
    him beginning in October of 2011 and completed two months of
    reconciliations, instructing Santiago to update his records up through
    September of 2013 within thirty days.
    Murphy returned to Santiago’s office on November 18 to review
    Santiago’s reconstructed check register and reconciliation documents.
    Murphy reported that “[t]his review revealed that [Santiago] had
    numerous deposits and withdrawals that he could not associate with a
    specific client and that he did not create a separate sub-account ledger
    page for each client.” Murphy prepared a spreadsheet to assist Santiago
    and discovered six clients with a negative balance and an overall account
    deficiency of $5257.    As Murphy reported, “This is clear evidence that
    2Murphy’s  final report documented cash withdrawals from Santiago’s trust
    account in 2012 on March 26, May 18, July 19, September 13, September 27,
    October 15, and October 19. Murphy also documented cash withdrawals on May 10
    and July 1 of 2013. Santiago admitted to another cash withdrawal on January 3 of
    2014.
    9
    [Santiago] has not been keeping timely records and has not been
    providing the required notices and accountings to his clients.” Murphy
    continued to work with Santiago to address the discrepancy. Santiago
    initially agreed to update Murphy by January 2, 2014, then promised to
    send information by January 22.          On January 21, Santiago called
    Murphy to say he had a new bookkeeper who would need more time to
    analyze his records and update his spreadsheets. Santiago sent Murphy
    an updated client ledger spreadsheet on February 11, but it still showed
    a $1000 deficiency.     On March 20, Santiago told Murphy he had
    discovered the problem and reduced the deposit amounts for two clients
    so the deficiency no longer existed.       On March 24, Santiago asked
    Murphy if he could now withdraw earned funds from the trust account.
    Murphy responded that he could if he provided notice and accounting to
    the client and provided Murphy with a copy of the notice.
    On March 31, Murphy emailed Santiago and asked to meet on
    April 9 to continue the audit. Murphy requested documentation for the
    bank statements, check registers, and client ledgers between September
    2013 and March 2014. Santiago responded a few minutes later, saying:
    [H]ere’s my problem
    I stopped adding anything new into my client trust
    acct. until you gave me a clearance from the current review.
    I’ve been keeping records of new clients but not entered into
    the computer. I’ve ask[ed] Elizabeth to wait until I can get
    this first phase (this is what I am calling it) resolved. Then I
    was going to pick up from Sept 2013 to the present; which I
    postponed until this instant matter is taken care of.
    I can’t even have you come over on the 9th, b/c I need
    to have Elizabeth and I now pick up from Sept. 2013 to the
    present . . . .
    Santiago provided most of the information Murphy requested on
    April 21. Murphy noted Santiago still showed recent cash withdrawals
    10
    from the trust account and asked Santiago to provide him a copy of his
    fee agreement with his clients. Santiago responded:
    Ninety-five percent of my work is a flat fee
    arrangement. As of this writing I do not have a Contract for
    me and my clients. This has not been a problem. But I will
    prepare a Flat Fee arrangement for my clients. Further, I am
    improving on my notices and accountings of the clients’
    ledgers and letters which have more details.
    Murphy noted in his report that as of April of 2014 he believed Santiago
    had achieved good trust account records as far as reconciliation with no
    outstanding deficiencies. Murphy testified at the hearing that he spent
    at least forty hours auditing Santiago and assisting him in bringing
    records up to date. He also testified Santiago was cooperative, honest,
    and forthright with him, and he saw no evidence of misappropriation.
    D. The Disciplinary Proceedings.        The Board received Cole’s
    complaint on May 24, 2013, and wrote Santiago on June 13 with several
    inquiries. Santiago responded by letter dated July 9. He admitted his
    failure to deposit the Moreno retainer in his trust account, asserted he
    had earned more than the retainer, and denied he charged an
    unreasonable fee.    The Board filed its complaint on May 29, 2014,
    alleging that Santiago violated Iowa Rules of Professional Conduct
    32:1.5(a), 32:1.15, and 32:8.4(c), as well as Iowa Court Rules 45.1,
    45.2(2), 45.2(3), and 45.7.    On July 14, Santiago filed his answer,
    admitting that he failed to give notice and accounting to his criminal
    defense clients when making withdrawals and failed to deposit the
    Moreno retainer in his trust account.     In the same answer, Santiago
    asserted he kept adequate trust records “proportional to his office,” while
    admitting he kept no check register or client ledgers. On September 3,
    Santiago admitted in his answers to the Board’s request for admissions
    that his reconciliation had not complied with the rules and that he
    11
    withdrew earned retainers from the trust account without the required
    notice and accounting.   Santiago continued to deny that he overbilled
    Moreno or falsified his time representing Moreno.
    The commission held an evidentiary hearing on October 27. On
    December 30, the commission released its “Findings of Fact, Conclusions
    of Law, and Recommendations.”      The commission found Santiago had
    violated rules 32:1.5 and 32:1.15 by representing his clients with no
    clear fee agreement and failing to put client funds in a trust account.
    The commission also found Santiago’s failure to deposit funds in his
    trust account, provide contemporaneous accountings upon withdrawal,
    and keep adequate records violated client trust account rules 45.1,
    45.2(3), 45.7(3), and 45.7(4). However, the commission found that the
    Board had not met its burden to prove Santiago had acted dishonestly in
    violation of rule 32:8.4(c) or charged Moreno an unreasonable fee.
    Santiago appealed the commission’s findings and conclusions.
    II. Scope of Review.
    Our review of attorney disciplinary proceedings is de novo. Iowa
    Ct. R. 35.11(1). We give the commission’s findings and recommendations
    “respectful consideration, but we are not bound by them.” Iowa Supreme
    Ct. Att’y Disciplinary Bd. v. Ricklefs, 
    844 N.W.2d 689
    , 696 (Iowa 2014).
    The Board must prove an attorney’s misconduct by a convincing
    preponderance of the evidence.    
    Id. at 697.
      “This burden requires a
    greater showing than the preponderance of the evidence standard, but is
    less demanding than proof beyond a reasonable doubt.” Iowa Supreme
    Ct. Att’y Disciplinary Bd. v. Kersenbrock, 
    821 N.W.2d 415
    , 418–19 (Iowa
    2012).   If we determine a violation has occurred, we may impose a
    sanction that is greater or lesser than the sanction recommended by the
    commission. 
    Ricklefs, 844 N.W.2d at 697
    .
    12
    III. Ethical Violations.
    Santiago’s answer to the Board’s complaint admitted he failed to
    deposit the Moreno retainer in his trust account, admitted his cash
    withdrawals from his trust account, admitted his failure to provide notice
    and accounting when withdrawing funds from the trust account, and
    admitted his lack of a written fee agreement. “Factual matters admitted
    by an attorney in an answer are deemed established . . . .”              Iowa
    Supreme Ct. Att’y Disciplinary Bd. v. Nelson, 
    838 N.W.2d 528
    , 532 (Iowa
    2013); see also Iowa Supreme Ct. Att’y Disciplinary Bd. v. Alexander, 
    727 N.W.2d 120
    , 122 (Iowa 2007) (“Admissions may be relied upon to meet
    the evidentiary burden of the Board.”). Nonetheless, we review de novo
    all of the allegations brought by the Board. See Iowa Supreme Ct. Att’y
    Disciplinary Bd. v. Kelsen, 
    855 N.W.2d 175
    , 181 (Iowa 2014) (“An
    attorney’s stipulation as to a violation is not binding on us.”). Upon our
    review, we find Santiago violated our trust account rules and failed to
    communicate his hourly rate, but the Board failed to prove he charged
    Moreno an unreasonable fee.
    A. Trust Account Violations.
    1. Rule 32:1.15 (Safekeeping Property). Iowa Rule of Professional
    Conduct 32:1.15 states in relevant part:
    (a) A lawyer shall hold property of clients . . . separate
    from the lawyer’s own property. Funds shall be kept in a
    separate account. . . . Complete records of such account
    funds and other property shall be kept by the lawyer . . . .
    ....
    (c) A lawyer shall deposit into a client trust account
    legal fees and expenses that have been paid in advance, to
    be withdrawn by the lawyer only as fees are earned or
    expenses incurred.
    Iowa R. Prof’l Conduct 32:1.15.        The commission determined that
    Santiago violated this rule.     Santiago admittedly failed to place the
    13
    Moreno retainer in his trust account upon receipt and instead placed the
    cash in a drawer in his office.         The failure to deposit cash retainers
    potentially facilitates income tax avoidance. It also results in the loss of
    interest income for IOLTA that funds legal aid and other programs that
    assist the indigent. See Iowa Ct. R. 44.1(1) (governing the interest on
    lawyers’ trust account (IOLTA) program); Comm. on Prof’l Ethics &
    Conduct v. Humphrey, 
    377 N.W.2d 643
    , 651 & n.20 (Iowa 1985)
    (Reynoldson, C.J., concurring specially) (discussing the creation of the
    IOLTA program).
    Santiago admitted he later deposited part of the retainer directly in
    his personal account and perhaps the rest in his business account.
    Auditor Murphy also testified that Santiago admitted to failing to deposit
    other cash retainers in the trust account. We find Santiago violated rule
    32:1.15(c). We also find Santiago’s record keeping deficient regarding his
    client ledgers and reconciliations.            Both McGarvey and Murphy
    discovered Santiago failed to provide notice and accounting and failed to
    reconcile his trust account regularly. Santiago admitted his records were
    incomplete and out of date and acknowledged in his annual client
    security report that his accounts were not reconciled. We find Santiago’s
    failure to keep proper records violated rule 32:1.15(a). 3
    2. Rule 45.1 (Requirement for client trust account).             Rule 45.1
    requires that “[f]unds a lawyer receives from clients or third persons for
    matters arising out of the practice of law in Iowa shall be deposited in
    one or more identifiable interest-bearing trust accounts located in Iowa.”
    3Santiago attempts to excuse his misconduct by contending he appropriately
    focused on representing Moreno in a fast-moving case and, as a sole practitioner,
    lacked time to deposit Moreno’s retainer. Those arguments are unavailing. All lawyers
    must make the time to comply with trust account requirements.
    14
    Iowa Ct. R. 45.1. The commission determined that Santiago violated rule
    45.1 by failing to deposit Moreno’s retainer in his trust account.          We
    agree.
    3. Rule 45.2(3) (Action required upon receiving funds, accounting,
    and records).      Rule 45.2(3) sets forth in detail the types of financial
    records lawyers must maintain for client trust accounts and billing. See
    Iowa Ct. R. 45.2(3). The commission determined that Santiago violated
    this rule by failing to keep adequate trust account records. The 2011
    and 2013 audits conducted by McGarvey and Murphy demonstrate that
    Santiago failed to keep adequate check registers, client ledgers, and
    reconciliations.      While Santiago claimed he personally reviewed his
    records regularly, he admitted his “reconciling is simple, granted not as
    required under the Rules.” We find Santiago violated rule 45.2(3).
    4. Rule 45.7 (Advance fee and expense payments).        Rule 45.7(3)
    requires a lawyer to “deposit advance fee and expense payments from a
    client into the trust account and . . . withdraw such payments only as
    the fee is earned or the expense is incurred.”        
    Id. r. 45.7(3).
      For the
    reasons discussed above, we find Santiago’s failure to deposit Moreno’s
    retainer into his trust fund violated rule 45.7. Further, the rule states:
    Notification upon withdrawal of fee or expense. A lawyer
    accepting advance fee or expense payments must notify the
    client in writing of the time, amount, and purpose of any
    withdrawal of the fee or expense, together with a complete
    accounting. The attorney must transmit such notice no later
    than the date of the withdrawal.
    
    Id. r. 45.7(4).
        “Contemporaneous    billing   requirements      provide
    transparency to help ensure lawyers treat clients honestly and deal fairly
    with clients purchasing legal services.    These record-keeping rules are
    essential to upholding public confidence in the justice system.”          Iowa
    Supreme Ct. Att’y Disciplinary Bd. v. Boles, 
    808 N.W.2d 431
    , 441 (Iowa
    15
    2012).   The commission found Santiago violated this rule.         Santiago
    admitted to both auditors and to the Board that he made withdrawals
    from his trust account without notifying clients or providing a timely
    accounting. We likewise find Santiago violated rule 45.7(4).
    B. Other Violations.
    1. Rule 32:1.5 (Fees). The Board alleged Santiago charged Moreno
    an unreasonable fee for the work he performed.        “A lawyer shall not
    make an agreement for, charge, or collect an unreasonable fee or an
    unreasonable amount for expenses . . . .”        Iowa R. Prof’l Conduct
    32:1.5(a). Cole’s letter to the Board disputed both the amount of time
    Santiago spent performing specific tasks on Moreno’s behalf and the
    scope of Santiago’s representation. However, Santiago testified he had
    performed substantial work in preparing Moreno’s case and performed
    the work he did with Moreno’s landlord, employer, and military contacts
    at Moreno’s request.
    The commission found the Board failed to meet its burden to show
    Santiago charged an unreasonable fee.        The commission necessarily
    found Santiago’s testimony credible as to his time charges.        We give
    deference to the commission’s credibility determinations because the
    commissioners hear live testimony and personally observe the demeanor
    of the respondent and the witnesses. Iowa Supreme Ct. Att’y Disciplinary
    Bd. v. Clarity, 
    838 N.W.2d 648
    , 659 (Iowa 2013).      Further, the hourly
    rate Santiago charged Moreno is reasonable given Santiago’s experience
    in handling criminal matters. On our de novo review, we decline to find
    Santiago charged Moreno an unreasonable fee.
    However, Moreno’s confusion about Santiago’s hourly rate helps
    establish that Santiago violated rule 32:1.5(b), which provides:
    16
    (b) The scope of the representation and the basis or
    rate of the fee and expenses for which the client will be
    responsible shall be communicated to the client, preferably
    in writing, before or within a reasonable time after
    commencing the representation, except when the lawyer will
    charge a regularly represented client on the same basis or
    rate. Any changes in the basis or rate of the fee or expenses
    shall also be communicated to the client.
    Iowa R. Prof’l Conduct 32:1.5(b). Santiago admitted he had no written
    fee agreement with Moreno and that he does not use written fee
    agreements for the majority of his criminal defense work, saying, “This
    has not been a problem.” Although rule 32:1.5(b) stops short of requiring
    a written fee agreement, the rule plainly requires that an attorney
    communicate to a client the scope of the representation and basis or rate
    of the fee. Cole testified she understood Santiago never discussed his
    hourly rate with Moreno. Santiago, present for Cole’s testimony, offered
    no rebuttal on that point. If he had in fact orally informed Moreno of his
    hourly rate, we would expect him to so testify. He did not. A written fee
    agreement would have avoided the dispute that arose over Santiago’s
    hourly rate. The commission found Santiago violated rule 32:1.5. We
    agree that Santiago failed to communicate in a timely fashion his hourly
    rate to Moreno and therefore violated rule 32:1.5(b).
    2. Rule 32:8.4 (Dishonesty). Finally, the Board charged Santiago
    with violating rule 32:8.4(c), which prohibits a lawyer from “engag[ing] in
    conduct involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit, or misrepresentation.”     
    Id. r. 32:8.4(c).
      The Board argued that Santiago was motivated to
    exaggerate his time spent on Moreno’s representation because he had
    never deposited the funds and needed the money.           Santiago, while
    generally admitting his trust account violations, consistently denied he
    overcharged Moreno and insisted that he fully earned the retainer
    Moreno paid him.    Both auditors testified Santiago was forthright and
    17
    honest in his communications with them. The commission found that
    Santiago did not engage in dishonesty in his billing practices. Again, we
    defer to the commission’s assessment of Santiago’s credibility. 
    Clarity, 838 N.W.2d at 659
    . We find the Board failed to prove by a convincing
    preponderance of the evidence that Santiago violated rule 32:8.4(c).
    IV. Sanction.
    Having   determined    that   Santiago    violated   rules   32:1.5(b),
    32:1.15(a) and (c), 45.1, 45.2(3), and 45.7(3) and (4), we must decide the
    appropriate sanction.
    “ ‘Attorney disciplinary proceedings are not designed to
    punish, but rather to determine the fitness of an officer of
    [the] court to continue in that capacity, to insulate the
    courts and the public from those persons unfit to practice
    law, to protect the integrity of and the public confidence in
    our system of justice, and to deter other lawyers from
    engaging in similar acts or practices.’ ”
    Iowa Supreme Ct. Att’y Disciplinary Bd. v. Howe, 
    706 N.W.2d 360
    , 378
    (Iowa 2005) (alteration in original) (quoting Comm. on Prof’l Ethics &
    Conduct v. Vesole, 
    400 N.W.2d 591
    , 593 (Iowa 1987)). In determining the
    appropriate sanction,
    “we consider the nature and extent of the respondent’s
    ethical infractions, his fitness to continue practicing law, our
    obligation to protect the public from further harm by the
    respondent, the need to deter other attorneys from engaging
    in similar misconduct, our desire to maintain the reputation
    of the bar as a whole, and any aggravating or mitigating
    circumstances.”
    
    Id. (quoting Iowa
    Supreme Ct. Bd. of Prof’l Ethics & Conduct v. Kallsen,
    
    670 N.W.2d 161
    , 164 (Iowa 2003)). “There is no standard sanction for
    particular types of misconduct.” 
    Clarity, 838 N.W.2d at 660
    . While prior
    cases may be instructive, “ ‘we determine the appropriate sanctions in
    light of the unique circumstances of the case before us.’ ” 
    Id. (quoting 18
    Iowa Supreme Ct. Att’y Disciplinary Bd. v. Rhinehart, 
    827 N.W.2d 169
    ,
    182 (Iowa 2013)).
    The commission recommends that we suspend Santiago’s law
    license for at least sixty days. We give the commission’s recommendation
    respectful consideration. See 
    Ricklefs, 844 N.W.2d at 696
    . The Board
    recommends     a    suspension   of   ninety   days   to   avoid   automatic
    reinstatement, but acknowledges our applicable cases support a
    suspension of thirty to sixty days as well. Santiago asks for a private or
    public reprimand, arguing that his faulty bookkeeping caused no harm
    to clients and that the Board failed to prove misappropriation or more
    serious wrongdoing. We agree that no client harm was proven, which is
    a mitigating factor, but the poor state of his record keeping made it
    difficult for the auditors to trace funds to confirm lack of harm to clients.
    In Kersenbrock, we noted “the persistent failure to keep appropriate
    records has the effect of preventing effective review of Kersenbrock’s
    accounting 
    practices.” 821 N.W.2d at 422
    . That observation applies to
    Santiago’s practice.
    The commission correctly identified as a mitigating factor that
    Santiago primarily represents clients in a non-English speaking,
    underserved    Hispanic   community.       See Iowa Supreme Ct. Att’y
    Disciplinary Bd. v. Mendez, 
    855 N.W.2d 156
    , 173 (Iowa 2014) (noting in
    mitigation that Mendez “serves a vulnerable population, many of whom
    do not speak English and are unfamiliar with the American legal
    system”). Santiago cooperated with the auditors, the commission, and
    the Board and admitted his trust account violations.          This too is a
    mitigating factor. See Iowa Supreme Ct. Att’y Disciplinary Bd. v. Eslick,
    
    859 N.W.2d 198
    , 202 (Iowa 2015) (stating “remorse and cooperation
    generally mitigate our sanction”); 
    Mendez, 855 N.W.2d at 173
    (stating
    19
    cooperation is generally considered a mitigating factor). Finally, Santiago
    has no prior disciplinary history, another mitigating factor.          See
    
    Kersenbrock, 821 N.W.2d at 422
    .
    Santiago argues Cole was motivated by petty revenge to file her
    complaint with the Board and that we should consider her motivation as
    a mitigating factor. His argument fails factually and legally. Factually,
    we do not find Cole bears a grudge from the events of the Pirtle trial ten
    years prior or that she filed the ethics complaint to settle a score with
    Santiago.
    Legally, Cole’s motivation for filing the ethics complaint is
    irrelevant to the sanction we impose. Santiago relies on a recent decision
    for the proposition that “personal issues” can be a mitigating factor. See
    Iowa Supreme Ct. Att’y Disciplinary Bd. v. Dolezal, 
    841 N.W.2d 114
    , 129
    (Iowa 2013) (“Personal issues, such as depression, can be a mitigating
    factor, but they ‘do not excuse a lawyer’s misconduct.’ ” (quoting Iowa
    Supreme Ct. Att’y Disciplinary Bd. v. Curtis, 
    749 N.W.2d 694
    , 703 (Iowa
    2008))).    In context, it is clear that Dolezal was referring to the
    respondent lawyer’s own personal problems such as depression—not the
    alleged animus of the complainant. We have consistently held that the
    motivation of the accuser does not excuse the respondent attorney’s
    misconduct or mitigate the sanction. See Iowa Supreme Ct. Bd. of Prof’l
    Ethics & Conduct v. Gallner, 
    621 N.W.2d 183
    , 188 (Iowa 2001) (“It is also
    unimportant that [the attorney]’s accusers may have been motivated to
    report his conduct by animosity or ill feelings.”); Iowa Supreme Ct. Bd. of
    Prof’l Ethics & Conduct v. Sunleaf, 
    588 N.W.2d 126
    , 127 (Iowa 1999)
    (“The commission was also correct in refusing to give consideration to the
    motive of [the attorney]’s former secretary in alerting the board to [the
    attorney]’s misconduct.”); Comm. on Prof’l Ethics & Conduct v. Hall, 463
    
    20 N.W.2d 30
    , 36 (Iowa 1990) (“The commission also viewed the fact that
    the injured parties were not the complainants as a mitigating factor. We
    do not believe this situation mitigates the severity of respondent’s
    conduct.”). 4 We reiterate the principle we stated more than seventy years
    ago:
    That one making an accusation against an attorney may be
    actuated by improper motives is not a bar to the prosecution
    of the charges. Nor is it necessary that charges be preferred
    [sic] or prosecuted by a person who claims injury from the
    alleged wrongdoings. Such proceedings are matters of public
    interest. The basis for judgment of the court is the proof or
    failure of proof of the charges and not the identity or motives
    of the accuser.
    In re Boyer, 
    231 Iowa 597
    , 600, 
    1 N.W.2d 707
    , 709 (1942). 5 Accordingly,
    the commission correctly determined that Cole’s motivation was not a
    mitigating factor.
    We turn next to the aggravating factors.               The commission aptly
    observed:
    Santiago’s failure to learn from his [2011] audit is an
    aggravating factor even though he did not receive any
    4The   complainant’s motivation or animus may be relevant to the credibility of his
    or her testimony in determining whether misconduct occurred. See, e.g., In re Krull,
    
    860 N.W.2d 38
    , 44 n.2 (Iowa 2015) (“We skeptically view motions to disqualify counsel
    filed by a litigation adversary.”); Iowa Supreme Ct. Att’y Disciplinary Bd. v. Ouderkirk,
    
    845 N.W.2d 31
    , 40 (Iowa 2014) (“[W]e approach with caution ethics complaints initiated
    by a litigation adversary.”). In this case, Santiago himself admitted violating the trust
    account rules, and our findings as to those rule violations do not rest on Cole’s
    credibility.
    5Indeed,  a duty to report violations of our disciplinary rules may exist regardless
    of the reporting attorney’s motivations. See Iowa R. Prof’l Conduct 32:8.3(a) (“A lawyer
    who knows that another lawyer has committed a violation of the Iowa Rules of
    Professional Conduct shall inform the appropriate professional authority.”); see also 16
    Gregory C. Sisk & Mark S. Cady, Iowa Practice Series: Lawyer and Judicial Ethics
    § 12:3(c), at 1047 (2015 ed.) (discussing confidentiality as an exception to the duty to
    report). Cole testified that Moreno waived privilege for purposes of reporting Santiago.
    We express no opinion whether Cole had sufficient knowledge of Santiago’s conduct to
    trigger a mandatory reporting obligation.
    21
    suspension and had corrected those issues. In addition, the
    Division finds that the respondent was admitted to [the]
    practice of law in 1995 and has substantial experience which
    is an aggravating factor and that based upon the amount of
    time that he had be[en] serving as an attorney he should
    understand the rules regarding the Trust Accounts and the
    necessity of keeping good records in order to adequately
    protect the interest of his clients.
    We agree that Santiago’s experience and his failure to comply with trust
    account requirements despite the lessons he should have learned from
    his 2011 audit are aggravating factors.
    We have imposed a range of sanctions for trust account violations:
    When dealing with client trust account violations, our
    sanctions have ranged from a public reprimand when the
    violation was relatively minor and isolated, to license
    suspension when the violation involved poor office
    management and neglect, to license revocation when the
    violation amounted to a misappropriation of client funds.
    Based upon the record in this case, we are not faced with a
    single incident, nor are we dealing with a case of
    misappropriation. Therefore, the suspension cases are most
    helpful in determining the ultimate sanction to impose in
    this case.     Cases involving suspension for client trust
    account violations range from two months in less serious
    cases, to eighteen months in very severe cases when the
    violations combine with multiple instances of neglect and
    other ethical violations.
    Iowa Supreme Ct. Att’y Disciplinary Bd. v. Parrish, 
    801 N.W.2d 580
    , 588–
    90 (Iowa 2011) (citations omitted) (imposing a sixty-day suspension).
    This case does not involve misappropriation or harm to a client.
    Nevertheless, suspension is warranted given Santiago’s postaudit
    continuing disregard for the trust account rules scrupulously followed by
    other Iowa practitioners. A mere reprimand on this record would weaken
    the deterrence so important to motivating compliance with our rules that
    protect the public and maintain confidence in our legal system.
    In Ricklefs, an attorney committed a series of additional trust
    account violations after a prior audit revealed the problems and he was
    22
    given the opportunity to resolve them. 
    Ricklefs, 844 N.W.2d at 692
    –93.
    Like Santiago, Ricklefs failed to keep a ledger or check register and did
    not reconcile his trust account monthly. 
    Id. Unlike Santiago,
    Ricklefs
    commingled client funds with his own and was dishonest on his client
    security commission form. 
    Id. at 695.
    We found that Ricklefs warranted
    a stiffer sanction because he “was given a second chance after the [first]
    audit but did not mend his ways.”       
    Id. at 702.
      We imposed a three-
    month suspension. 
    Id. In another
    recent disciplinary case, we imposed
    a six-month suspension for trust account violations based in part on the
    fact the attorney had been audited previously:
    The record overwhelmingly documents Morris’s failure to
    comply with these clearly prescribed record-keeping and
    account-management requirements.     His noncompliance
    persisted even after the auditors supplied him with an
    informational roadmap in May 2010.
    Iowa Supreme Ct. Att’y Disciplinary Bd. v. Morris, 
    847 N.W.2d 428
    , 435,
    437 (Iowa 2014). Santiago likewise received an “informational roadmap”
    from his 2011 audit, yet continued to flout our record-keeping rules.
    Similarly, in Iowa Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary Board v. Powell,
    we imposed a three-month disciplinary suspension for the wholesale
    mismanagement of a trust account resulting in a significant shortage
    that continued after an audit and required appointment of a trustee.
    
    830 N.W.2d 355
    , 356, 360 (Iowa 2013). We expect lawyers to learn from
    their mistakes, and their failure to take to heart lessons learned through
    audits is an aggravating factor. See 
    id. at 356,
    359–60.
    We have imposed suspensions in other cases involving a pattern of
    trust account violations. See 
    Eslick, 859 N.W.2d at 203
    –04 (imposing a
    thirty-day suspension for “wholesale neglect of the obligation to maintain
    records” creating a “pattern of rule violations”); 
    Mendez, 855 N.W.2d at 23
    160, 175 (ordering California attorney to cease and desist practicing
    immigration law in Iowa for sixty days, based on trust account and other
    rule violations); 
    Kersenbrock, 821 N.W.2d at 422
    (imposing a thirty-day
    suspension for “systemic failure to maintain adequate accounting
    records”);   
    Boles, 808 N.W.2d at 442
    –43   (imposing   a   thirty-day
    suspension for trust account and other rule violations, noting in
    mitigation cooperation, corrective measures, and exemplary record of
    volunteer pro bono and community service).
    Considering all of the aggravating and mitigating factors, we
    conclude that Santiago’s misconduct requires more than a reprimand.
    We determine that Santiago’s license should be suspended indefinitely
    with no possibility of reinstatement for thirty days.
    V. Disposition.
    We suspend Santiago’s license to practice law with no possibility of
    reinstatement for thirty days from the filing of this opinion.          This
    suspension shall apply to all facets of the practice of law. See Iowa Ct. R.
    35.13(3).    Santiago must comply with the notification requirements of
    Iowa Court Rule 35.23. Costs are assessed against Santiago pursuant to
    Iowa Court Rule 35.27(1). Unless the Board objects, Santiago shall be
    automatically reinstated after the thirty-day suspension period on the
    condition that all costs have been paid. Iowa Ct. R. 35.13(2).
    LICENSE SUSPENDED.
    All justices concur except Hecht, J., who takes no part.