#lawtwitter #appellatetwitter The problem: until the legal profession's culture undergoes some changes, this is going to be a problem. Let me tell you a little story about representing a female partner who accused a senior partner of sexual harassment 1/
I send a demand letter to the firm's managing partner. A few days later I receive a call from an outside attorney, who focused in plaintiff's law, saying he represents the firm and that we should mediate the case. Great. So we select a mediator and go mediate at a 2/
neutral site in another town -on a Sunday. All very hush-hush. The mediator was a woman who spent 30 years on the bench at the trial and appellate levels - we felt good about our chances of early resolution. But, for some damn reason, the firm brought the senior 3/
partner who had been accused of all of this stuff (and we had emails, it ain't like he could say it never happened). The mediation was a total waste of time. We couldn't make any headway. At 7pm I said "screw it" and we bounced. On my way out the door, the firm's outside 4/
counsel grabbed me and said "just call me tomorrow morning. Don't do anything, ok?" So I said alright. Called him - the managing partner and the risk committee had authorized a settlement that was five times anything they would offer in that mediation. That was acceptable 5/
to the client. I asked what in the hell happened at the mediation. The accused partner was throwing himself across the tracks, and swearing up and down that he could wear down my client, and that she would never really file suit out of fear. About a month later I 6/
mediated another case with the same mediator. She pulled me into the hallway and asked if the matter with the law firm had settled. I said it had. She responded "thank God," and told me that the senior partner had been calling her "honey," "sweetie," and had winked at 7/
her on multiple occasions - all of this in front of the firm's managing partner, outside counsel, and two members of the risk committee. Obviously, everyone in the room knew that was incredibly inappropriate but not one person opened their damn mouth - even though this guy 8/
was actually their subordinate! He is still a senior partner at this firm. My client left private practice for government work. I realized there that the harasser was not the problem - it was all the men who knew better who wouldn't say anything about it. Until those 9/
folks are willing to get involved, right to someone's face, I don't see this problem getting much better anytime soon. 10/10

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More from @K_NoiseWaterMD

Aug 8, 2018
Funny angry judge story. So a few years back, our local PD's office picked up a new hire from a law school out of state - can't remember where, but his parents had some kind of connection in KY.

So anyways, this dude was straight up insufferable right out of the gate. He 1/
carried himself like he'd been practicing for thirty damn years, he talked down to other attorneys, and he was often short with court staff (mortal sin).

So one day he's in front of my judge on a probation revocation hearing. Now my judge rarely revokes probation. 2/
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Long story short, his guy had been on probation for a few years and 3/
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May 27, 2018
[THREAD] Story time. As is Appalachian tradition, we turn everything into a story. I boxed for a long time. It was the only sport I was naturally good at. I worked hard at it, as well. Boxing is a hell of a sport to train for, which is why so many folks stop short 1/
after awhile. Anyway, every year there was a glorified tough man contest a few towns over from me. Anyone could sign up for this "boxing" tournament. Sign a waiver and you're good to go. So the last year I did it my second round "opponent" was a pretty typical contestant. 2/
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