After all, he himself should collected $14 Million for his services, but was paid $20.5 million. Simple arithmetic shows the 440 clients did not get the money that was due. Chesley for his part claims he was there only to negotiate a settlement and had no duty to the clients, but the law disagrees.
A hearing officer recommending Chesley’s disbarment said he was “fully aware” that the settlement was shady, and that “fifth-grade arithmetic” shows that he was being paid $7.6 million more than his contract entitled him, as reported by the Courier Journal.
The case has been called “the largest-scale fraud in the history of the Commonwealth of Kentucky.” The other lawyers involved, Gallion and Cunningham, were convicted of fraud and sentenced to 25 and 20 years in prison, while Mills, the third, was acquitted according to his argument that he was “too drunk to have participated.” Bunch of winners here!
Chesley at least has put in his time, is near retiring age, and has had his days of glory. Just as the law did in Socrates when he was already in his 70’s, it’s a little less tragic when a career is cut short by a few days rather than a few decades.