Northampton Lawyer Suspended for Bad Behavior in Court, Disciplinary Proceedings
A Northampton County lawyer has been suspended for two years after misconduct in a case including filing frivolous motions and disrespecting participants, exacerbated by outrageous misbehavior in disciplinary proceedings.
On March 13, 2026, the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania entered an order adopting the recommendation of the Disciplinary Board and suspending
Ronnie Louis Creazzo for two years.
Creazzo’s problems arose from a divorce action in which he represented the husband. At one point, opposing counsel filed a Motion for Special Relief to Compel Discovery. The original motion filed with the Prothonotary was single-sided, as required by the rules, but the copy sent to Creazzo was printed double-sided to save paper.
Creazzo then filed a Motion for Special Relief requesting the court,
inter alia, strike Defendant’s Motion and impose sanctions on the Defendant in the divorce action. Opposing counsel then filed a countermotion for sanctions on the basis that Creazzo’s filing was frivolous.
The Court held a hearing on both motions. During the hearing the Judge questioned Creazzo about whether he had gone to the Prothonotary’s office to confirm that the original filing was double-sided. He asserted he had no duty to do so and responded disrespectfully to the Court, saying, “Okay, and what was I supposed to do, Judge? Stand there and make copies?” The Judge commented, “I am going to be honest with you. This is the craziest, stupidest, most ridiculous issue I have ever heard in Motions Court.”
Between the hearing and the issuance of a decision, Creazzo sent two emails to the Judge’s secretary, raising additional issues and arguments and making disparaging comments about the integrity of opposing counsel. This was in violation of a policy of the court forbidding lawyers to send the Court unsolicited emails.
The Court then issued an Order denying Creazzo’s motion and granting the Defendant’s motion for sanctions. The Court commented, “The Motion for Special Relief filed by Attorney Creazzo should never have been presented to the court, as it was frivolous. Moreover, Attorney Creazzo’s response to the court’s legitimate question about whether he had checked the Prothonotary’s file before making written allegations and oral representations about the Motion’s alleged defectiveness was disrespectful and unprofessional.”
Creazzo filed a Motion for Reconsideration and, when that was denied, an appeal which was also denied. He continued to send unsolicited emails to the Court.
The Judge filed a complaint with the Office of Disciplinary Counsel, based on the frivolous motion, disrespectful conduct, and unsolicited emails which the Judge considered to be
ex parte communications.
Disciplinary Counsel sent Creazzo a DB-7 letter of inquiry. He refused to respond to the letter, stating in an email that he was invoking his Fifth Amendment privilege against testifying against himself. He also made scandalous allegations against the Judge.
Without a response from Creazzo, Disciplinary Counsel recommended that he be subject to an Informal Admonition, an outcome which was approved by a Hearing Committee Member. His problems could have ended there, but Creazzo exercised his right under Disciplinary Board Rule § 87.54 to request the institution of formal charges.
The Office of Disciplinary Counsel filed a Petition for Discipline in accordance with the rule. Creazzo did not respond to a request that he accept service, so an Investigator for the Office of Disciplinary Counsel went to Creazzo’s house to serve him with the Petition for Discipline. Creazzo addressed the Investigator with threats and obscenities and then sent several emails to Disciplinary Counsel with threats that included, “If you send someone from your office to my personal property again, they will not live to tell about it.”
Disciplinary Counsel filed a Petition to have Creazzo temporarily suspended. The petition was granted and Creazzo was temporarily suspended by
Order of the Supreme Court dated December 30, 2024.
Eventually, Disciplinary Counsel obtained substituted service. Creazzo filed an Answer to the Petition for Discipline, refusing to respond to the allegations and asserting Fifth Amendment privilege. The matter went to a disciplinary hearing before a three-member Hearing Committee. During the penalty phase of the hearing, the Disciplinary Counsel who was the subject of Creazzo’s email threats testified about those threats and Creazzo’s generally uncooperative responses. During his cross-examination of the Disciplinary Counsel, the Hearing Committee Chair twice admonished Creazzo to stop yelling at the witness and, at one point, directed him to leave the hearing room and take a break to calm down.
In the briefing stage, Creazzo filed a brief which was sarcastic in tone and contained inflammatory and derogatory statements and insinuations about the judges on the Northampton County bench, the Northampton County Prothonotary, Disciplinary Counsel, and other ODC staff.
The Hearing Committee found that the evidence established Creazzo violated Rules of Professional Conduct
3.1 (Meritorious Claims and Contentions),
3.5(a) (seeking to improperly influence a judge),
3.5(b) (
ex parte communications), and
Pa.R.D.E. 203(b)(7) (failure without good cause to respond to a request for statement of position). The Committee found that Creazzo’s underlying misconduct was “severely exacerbated” by “significant” aggravating factors including failure to accept responsibility, lack of respect and disdain for the disciplinary process, failure to appreciate the seriousness of his conduct, repeatedly making light of the ethical violations, and shifting blame to others. The Committee unanimously recommended a two-year suspension.
The Disciplinary Board independently reviewed the record and issued a Report that highlighted its finding that Creazzo displayed extreme unprofessionalism and utter contempt for the disciplinary proceedings. It unanimously recommended a two-year suspension to the Supreme Court. In its
Order, the Court imposed a two-year suspension.
ABA Formal Opinion Addresses Lawyer’s Obligation to Provide Information to Former Clients or Successor Counsel
In its
Formal Opinion 520 (1/26/2026), the American Bar Association’s Standing Committee on Ethics and Professional Responsibility
discusses what information a lawyer is obligated to share with former clients or successor counsel under the Rules of Professional Conduct.
The Opinion interprets the practical applications of the lawyer’s duty under the
Model Rules of Professional Conduct Rule 1.16(d) [Pennsylvania version]. That rule states, “Upon termination of representation, a lawyer shall take steps to the extent reasonably practicable to protect a client’s interests.” Obviously, this requires providing the former client with the information in the lawyer’s file on the matter. But how far in providing additional information must the lawyer go to meet this broad mandate?
The Committee calls the obligation under Rule 1.16(d) a “limited duty.” Generally, it is satisfied by providing the client’s file, but the Committee notes, “In certain areas of practice, however, lawyers who terminate a representation are expected to provide non-memorialized information to the client or successor counsel, although not necessarily as a matter of obligation under the rules of professional conduct.”
One example cited by the Committee is the obligation of criminal trial counsel to provide information and assistance to appellate or postconviction counsel, which the Committee describes as “an explicit and affirmative professional norm in criminal defense practice to assist successor counsel, insofar as reasonably possible, in evaluating the client’s matter in a criminal representation.”
Another example arises from agency law. The Committee observes that the Restatement of Agency says, “If the agency terminates without the fault of the principal, the agent is under a duty thereafter to give the principal relevant information received by the agent when acting as such.” In transactional representations, information may be needed to successfully complete negotiations or to understand the former client’s obligations or those of its counterparty under a contract.
Other examples of information not memorialized which a lawyer may be required to share include: (a) factual information that could have been, and perhaps should have been, memorialized, regarding, for example, an interview with a client or material witness or what happened off the record in court or in settlement negotiations with opposing counsel; (b) the original lawyer’s strategic or tactical reasons for actions taken in the course of representing the client; (c) that lawyer’s impression of a witness’s credibility; or (d) the lawyer’s un-memorialized communications with the client.
The duty to share is not infinite. Examples of information the lawyer is not expected to provide to successor counsel include information that is readily accessible elsewhere or by other means such as information available from court system websites or information concerning a different matter in which the lawyer did not represent the former client. A lawyer who represented a client in a completed business transaction would not have an obligation to comply with a request for information to be used in a subsequent lawsuit between the parties to the transaction because that would be a new matter even though it grew out of the transaction in which the lawyer provided legal services.
A lawyer is also not required to provide additional advice or services to a client after the relationship is terminated. When the request comes from an unrepresented former client, the lawyer should be careful to explain that the lawyer no longer represents the former client and is not providing further legal representation.
The opinion goes on to provide examples of situations where a lawyer may be called upon to provide additional information.
In conclusion, the Committee states, “Rule 1.16(d) does not require a lawyer to take steps to acquire information, research and generate written responses, or provide further legal services to the client in response to a request for information.”
AI Roundup: Precautionary Tales, New Risks, Prevention
It seems we could publish stories on the ethical implications of the growing use of Artificial Intelligence (AI) in the practice of law in every issue. This month presented a variety of cautionary cases and new developments in the response to the AI trend.
The United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
issued sanctions against two lawyers for a frivolous appeal in the case of
Whiting v. City of Athens based on a finding that they had relied on over two dozen fictitious cases in a series of appeals. The Court imposed sanctions under both
Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 38, which allows award of just damages and single or double costs, and also under its inherent authority, which allows the court to impose additional fines in cases where a litigant has acted in bad faith or willfully abused the judicial process. The Court noted that the lawyers were appealing a lower court decision to impose sanctions for citing fictitious decisions in their arguments in the lower court and engaged in the same misconduct in their appeal. The Court stressed that lawyers should not file any document, however generated, containing citations that the lawyer has not personally read and verified.
A federal prosecutor in North Carolina resigned from his office after admitting that he made errors in a brief by using artificial intelligence. In a statement in court,
Assistant U.S. Attorney Rudy Renfer told U.S. Magistrate Judge Robert T. Numbers II that he used AI to “catch up” on a draft filing and that the software had overwritten his original draft. He admitted it was “the worst decision [he had] ever made in my thirty-year career.” The Court was skeptical of his explanation, pulling up a slide deck which enumerated several errors in recent case filings. The U.S. Attorney’s Office announced it was taking steps to re-confirm policies about attorneys' use of AI.
A U.S. judge in the Southern District of New York has
raised the risk factor for use of AI in legal process with a
decision that a client who ran his case through Claude, an AI engine, before presenting the results to his attorneys waived attorney-client privilege in those documents by doing so.
A
survey by Paragon Legal finds widespread discomfort in the legal profession with the use of AI in legal research and drafting:
- Two-thirds of legal professionals have had to override or correct an AI-generated legal output.
- Nearly three in five legal professionals say they would not feel comfortable submitting an AI-drafted document to a regulator or court.
- Nearly half of legal professionals say AI automation has sparked internal conflict within their legal team.
- Only one in five legal professionals place high trust in AI-generated legal work.
- Forty-three percent of legal professionals expect increased AI use to result in reduced hiring or staffing needs due to automation.
For those lawyers who persist in using AI research tools in the drafting of legal documents, help may be on the way. AI company BriefCase is planning the release of
RealityCheck, software designed to catch and highlight hallucinated references in one’s (or one’s opponent’s) legal filings.
Or you could just have a human being look up the citations.
Legal Doublets: Once Is Not Enough
In a Facebook post, Merriam-Webster
offers an interesting explanation of “legal doublets.” You know what they are, and you’ve used them:
- Cease and desist
- Null and void
- Aid and abet
- Free and clear
- Ways and means
Such constructions, Merriam-Webster explains, date back to 1066 and the Norman conquest of England. The Norman nobility spoke French, and the common people spoke English. The double constructions were intended to clearly communicate in words with origins in both languages. For instance, “breaking and entering” arose from the English term “breaking” and the French “entering”; “will and testament” from the English “will” and French “testament.” In a similar vein, “attorney” has French origins while “lawyer” has roots in English.
Some may find this arbitrary and capricious, but we think it’s all well and good.