Court: 1-year suspension for Ohio St. case lawyer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — The Ohio Supreme Court has suspended for a year the law license of an attorney whose emails to Jim Tressel triggered an ongoing scandal and NCAA investigation that cost the coach his job at Ohio State. At issue was whether Columbus attorney Christopher Cicero violated professional rules of conduct that prohibit revealing information from meetings with a client or a prospective client. The court’s decision followed the recommendation of a disciplinary board that argued Cicero wrongly discussed interviews with tattoo parlor owner Edward Rife, a potential client. Cicero sent emails to then-coach Tressel in April 2010, warning him that players were selling memorabilia or trading them for tattoos. The correspondences sparked the scandal and ended Tressel’s Ohio State career.
Court backs OSU in ESPN suit
The Ohio Supreme Court on Tuesday sided with Ohio State University in an open records lawsuit brought by ESPN over documents it sought from the university related to the 2011 football team scandal and NCAA investigation.
Courts back Ohio State
COLUMBUS — The Ohio Supreme Court has sided with Ohio State University in a lawsuit brought by ESPN over records it sought in connection to the university’s football scandal and NCAA investigation.
Ohio court rules for Ohio State in ESPN suit
The Ohio Supreme Court has ruled in favor of Ohio State University in an open records lawsuit filed by ESPN.
Court backs OSU in lawsuit
COLUMBUS — The Ohio Supreme Court on Tuesday sided with Ohio State University in an open records lawsuit brought by ESPN over documents it sought from the university related to the 2011 football team scandal and NCAA investigation.
Court backs Ohio State in open records lawsuit
The Ohio Supreme Court has sided with Ohio State University in a lawsuit brought by ESPN over records it sought in connection to the university's football scandal and NCAA investigation.
Supreme Court sides with OSU in ESPN records fight
The Ohio Supreme Court ruled this morning that Ohio State University acted properly in refusing to release certain football scandal-related records to sports cable TV giant ESPN.
OSU case lawyer facing 6-month suspension
COLUMBUS, Ohio — The lawyer whose email tips about Ohio State football players trading memorabilia for tattoos triggered a far-reaching scandal should lose his law license for six months, an Ohio Supreme Court disciplinary board recommended for the second time.At issue is whether Columbus attorney Christopher Cicero violated professional rules of conduct that prohibit revealing information from …
Board seeks attorney's suspension
COLUMBUS, Ohio — The lawyer whose email tips about Ohio State football players trading memorabilia for tattoos triggered a far-reaching scandal should lose his law license for six months, an Ohio Supreme Court disciplinary board recommended for the second time.
Board Recommends 6-Month Suspension Again For Ohio St Case Lawyer
An Ohio Supreme Court disciplinary board has again recommended a six-month law license suspension for the lawyer whose email tips about Ohio State football players trading memorabilia for tattoos triggered a far-reaching scandal.
