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RULE 1.12 FORMER JUDGE OR ARBITRATOR
(a) Except as stated in paragraph (d), a lawyer shall not represent
anyone in connection with a matter in which the lawyer participated
personally and substantially as a judge or other adjudicative officer,
arbitrator or law clerk to such a person, unless all parties to the
proceeding consent after consultation.
(b) A lawyer shall not negotiate for employment with any person who is
involved as a party or as lawyer for a party in a matter in which the
lawyer is participating personally and substantially as a judge or
other adjudicative officer or arbitrator. A lawyer serving as a law
clerk to a judge, other adjudicative officer or arbitrator may
negotiate for employment with a party or lawyer involved in a matter in
which the clerk is participating personally and substantially, but only
after the lawyer has notified the judge, other adjudicative officer or
arbitrator. In addition, the law clerk shall promptly provide written
notice of acceptance of employment to all counsel of record in all such
matters in which the prospective employer is involved.
(c) If a lawyer is disqualified by paragraph (a), no lawyer in a firm
with which that lawyer is associated may knowingly undertake or
continue representation in the matter unless:
(2) written notice is promptly given to the appropriate tribunal to enable it to ascertain compliance with the provisions of this Rule.
(d) An arbitrator selected as a partisan of a party in a multimember arbitration panel is not prohibited from subsequently representing that party.
The maximum penalty for a violation of this Rule is a public reprimand.
Comment
This Rule generally parallels Rule 1.11: Successive Government and Private Employment. The term "personally and substantially" signifies that a judge who was a member of a multimember court, and thereafter left judicial office to practice law, is not prohibited from representing a client in a matter pending in the court, but in which the former judge did not participate. So also the fact that a former judge exercised administrative responsibility in a court does not prevent the former judge from acting as a lawyer in a matter where the judge had previously exercised remote or incidental administrative responsibility that did not affect the merits. The term "adjudicative officer" includes such officials as judges pro tempore, referees, special masters, hearing officers and other parajudicial officers, and also lawyers who serve as part-time judges. Compliance Canons A(2), B(2) and C of the Model Code of Judicial Conduct provide that a part-time judge, judge pro tempore or retired judge recalled to active service, may not "act as a lawyer in any proceeding in which he served as a judge or in any other proceeding related thereto." Although phrased differently from this Rule, those rules correspond in meaning.