Schapelle Corby’s former lawyer struck off
June 11th, 2009
Mr Tampoe did not contest the charge of professional misconduct comprised of disclosing on a national breakfast television show confidential information obtained during his retainer about criminal convictions of members of the Corby Family. Nor did he contest the unsatisfactory conduct comprised of commentating on his own defence strategies and calling his client’s family the biggest pile of trash he had ever come across in his life. That conduct was characterised as ‘scandalous, offensive and/or likely to bring the profession into disrepute’. You can still watch some of the conduct in question on Channel 9′s website.
Mr Tampoe, who has retired from practice and did not have a practising certificate at the time of the hearing did not contest the hearing or oppose the application to have him struck off. Remarkably, through his Gold Coast solicitor, Mr Tampoe professed not to have understood that he owed duties of confidentiality to Ms Corby, conceiving of Ron Bakir who ‘hired him’ as his client. He said:
‘he was under the mistaken belief that Mr
Bakir was his client and therefore there was no retainer or
solicitor/client relationship between himself and Ms Corby.’
‘The pair [Ms Schapelle and Ms Mercedes
Corby] claimed any conversations or legal instructions given to the Gold
Coast-based Tampoe were privileged and that he was professionally bound
to not divulge any information to anyone, including the media.
In February, Tampoe defended the charge
on the grounds he was hired by Schapelle’s so-called “white knight” and
financial benefactor, Ron Bakir, and as such privilege should be
afforded only to him.
Legal Services Commission barrister Ben
McMillan said at the time it was accepted Bakir had hired Tampoe, but
maintained privilege should have been extended to Schapelle and
Mercedes.’
It is my genuinely held belief that the Law Council of Australia should place a quarter page advertisement in The Australian reassuring the public that Ms Corby’s former lawyers’ behaviour is aberrant and reviled by thinking solicitors, and directing the public to an internet explanation of what solicitors’ and barristers’ duties of confidentiality actually are. I have said before that nothing in recent times is likely to have brought the profession into disrepute more than the antics of Mr Tampoe and the Western Australian silk. I mean, while professing publicly to be her lawyers, and while in fact being her lawyers, between them they told the national press and Channel 9 what would have been understood to mean:
- Camp Schapelle was trying to bribe the judges and the prosecutors;
- Camp Schapelle was full of criminals; and
- Camp Schapelle was full of stupid, self-obsessed trash.