Title: The Florida Bar v. Charles Paul-Thomas Phoenix

State: florida

Issuer: Florida Supreme Court

Document:

Supreme Court of Florida 
 
 
____________ 
 
No. SC17-585 
____________ 
 
THE FLORIDA BAR, 
Complainant, 
 
vs. 
 
CHARLES PAUL-THOMAS PHOENIX, 
Respondent. 
 
January 28, 2021 
 
PER CURIAM. 
 
We have for review a referee’s report recommending that Respondent, 
Charles Paul-Thomas Phoenix, be found guilty of professional misconduct and 
suspended from the practice of law for ninety days.  We have jurisdiction.  See art. 
V, § 15, Fla. Const.  We approve the referee’s findings of fact and 
recommendation as to guilt.  We also conclude that the referee considered the right 
aggravating and mitigating factors in applying the standards for imposing 
sanctions.  Yet we disapprove of the referee’s recommended sanction and order 
instead that Respondent be suspended from the practice of law for two years. 
 
 
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I 
 
This case arises from Phoenix’s involvement with Cay Clubs Resorts and 
Marinas (Cay Clubs), a company that pitched to investors the opportunity to buy 
and profit from the management of vacation rental units.  Phoenix was Cay Clubs’s 
lawyer, in one way or another, from 2005 until 2007.  The trouble is, Cay Clubs 
turned out to be a Ponzi scheme: it made so-called “leaseback” payments to initial 
investors using money from new investors and failed to disclose this practice on 
federal mortgage loan documents.  As Senior Vice President and General Counsel 
of Cay Clubs, Phoenix knew about and participated in Cay Clubs’s Ponzi scheme.  
When the scheme collapsed, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of 
Florida (USAO) investigated and prosecuted Cay Clubs’s executives and legal 
representatives.  Phoenix cooperated with the USAO in exchange for its agreement 
that he would not be prosecuted.  He never told The Florida Bar (Bar) about that 
agreement.  Years later, the Bar found out and initiated disciplinary proceedings 
against Phoenix for his role in Cay Clubs’s Ponzi scheme.  Phoenix has repeatedly 
denied any wrongdoing.  He challenges virtually all elements of the proceedings as 
improper and specifically alleges that the referee’s findings of fact are not 
supported by competent evidence. 
A 
Nobody disputes that Phoenix entered into a non-prosecution agreement 
 
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with the USAO on March 10, 2014 (NPA), so that seems to be a good place to 
begin our analysis.  As it turns out, in determining whether Phoenix’s conduct 
merits a longer suspension, we need consider nothing else. 
On its face, in its first paragraph, the NPA provides that the USAO will “not 
criminally prosecute [Phoenix] for any crimes related to [his] participation in the 
criminal conduct set forth” in an attachment to the NPA.  There is no ambiguity 
about whether the conduct it recounts is criminal in nature.  It is.  Phoenix may 
have avoided prosecution for his involvement in that criminal conduct, but by 
entering into the NPA, Phoenix “admits, accepts, and acknowledges responsibility 
for the conduct set forth” in the agreement. 
Among the things Phoenix admits in the agreement is the fact that Cay Clubs 
“did not heed his advice at times with regard to the sale and marketing of the 
investment” and that he “continued to work as a lawyer for the company despite 
the principals ignoring his advice, because he enjoyed his generous remuneration 
and other benefits associated with his role at the company.”  Phoenix “received and 
commented on marketing materials where fixed rates of return and leaseback 
payments were promised to potential investors well after he had advised the Cay 
Clubs principals to halt this practice and had obtained opinions from outside 
counsel concerning whether the investment was a security.” 
 
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What is more, Phoenix knew that the “leaseback payments made to investors 
were concealed from lenders on [real estate] closing documents, including by not 
listing the payment on the Settlement Statement or HUD-l,[1] when closings were 
conducted and lender financing was obtained.”  Phoenix “was also aware that if the 
leaseback payments were disclosed . . . that some or all of the transactions would 
not have been approved by the lender without more information.”  The closings 
“took place in Phoenix’s law office” and “at no point during these closings were 
the leaseback payments listed” on the HUD-1 closing statements. 
Phoenix was also aware that Cay Clubs was “teeter[ing] on the edge of 
insolvency” yet continued to use “false and misleading” marketing that 
“promis[ed] a rosy financial picture.”  Indeed, in Phoenix’s own view, “there came 
a time during the course of the operation of Cay Clubs where it could be fairly 
described as a ‘Ponzi Scheme’ due to its inability to pay existing leaseback 
obligations without new investor money.”  Investors began to complain that 
leaseback payments were not being made, yet Phoenix did not disclose Cay 
Clubs’s “inability [to] make leaseback payments . . . to lending institutions or 
future investors when ongoing marketing and financing activities took place.”  
Further, when Cay Clubs sought outside legal advice, Phoenix was aware that 
 
1.  A HUD-1 Settlement Statement is a federal mortgage lending form on 
which creditors or their closing agents disclose all charges imposed on buyers and 
sellers in consumer credit mortgage transactions. 
 
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“significant aspects of the Cay Clubs business and marketing efforts were not 
disclosed to the outside lawyers.”  In accordance with the advice from that counsel, 
Cay Clubs “put into place certain policies or procedures on paper,” yet Phoenix 
knew that the “ongoing marketing activities . . . were contrary to the 
representations made to outside counsel.” 
Phoenix “actively participated in the effort to try to incorrectly characterize 
the nature of the business.”  “The Cay Clubs principals made great efforts to avoid 
regulation under the securities laws, and Phoenix assisted in these efforts.”  
Phoenix knew that “Cay Clubs operated in a fraudulent manner, and that investors 
and others were defrauded through the making of false and misleading promises 
concerning the safety of the investment.”  “Phoenix was aware that [Cay Clubs’s] 
practices constituted a fraud on the lending institutions involved and these 
practices could be fairly described as mortgage fraud.” 
Finally, Phoenix agreed that he had “not always been forthcoming” with 
federal regulators “because he did not want to be held accountable for the 
misconduct at Cay Clubs, or the fraud that took place against the investors and the 
lending institutions.”  Phoenix agreed that in the federal investigation he had 
“minimized his role and knowledge of the events, and ha[d] sought to avoid his 
own liability.” 
 
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B 
Knowing all this, and knowing that he had admitted it, Phoenix nonetheless 
did not report the NPA or his work with Cay Clubs to the Bar.  In March 2017, the 
Bar filed a complaint with this Court against Phoenix for his role representing Cay 
Clubs.  The complaint alleged that Phoenix’s conduct violated two Rules 
Regulating the Florida Bar (Bar Rules): 4-1.16 (“[A] lawyer . . . shall withdraw 
from the representation of a client if . . . the representation will result in violation 
of the Rules of Professional Conduct or law; . . . the client persists in a course of 
action involving the lawyer’s services that the lawyer reasonably believe is 
criminal or fraudulent . . . or the client has used the lawyer’s services to perpetrate 
a crime or fraud. . . .”) and 4-4.1 (“[I]n the course of representing a client a lawyer 
shall not knowingly . . . make a false statement of material fact or law to a third 
person; or . . . fail to disclose a material fact to a third person when disclosure is 
necessary to avoid assisting a criminal or fraudulent act by a client . . . .”).  The 
complaint also alleged a lack of honesty by Phoenix. 
This Court referred the Bar’s complaint to a referee for a hearing and 
recommendation.2  The original referee did not make findings of fact or 
 
2.  Later, during the original proceedings before a referee, the Bar 
additionally argued that Phoenix violated Bar Rule 4-8.4(c) (“[A] lawyer shall not  
. . . engage in conduct involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit, or misrepresentation . . . 
.”). 
 
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recommendations as to guilt.  Instead, the referee recommended that Phoenix 
attend a diversion program.  The Bar challenged the original referee’s report.  This 
Court disapproved the report and sent the case back to the referee for additional 
proceedings.  We required the referee to issue findings of fact and determined that 
Phoenix was not eligible for diversion because his alleged misconduct was not 
“minor.” 
On remand, the chief judge of the Twelfth Judicial Circuit appointed herself 
as referee; the original referee had retired and was not eligible to serve as a senior 
judge.  The successor referee reviewed all pleadings, exhibits, transcripts, and 
briefs filed; afforded each side ninety minutes to present any relevant arguments, 
testimony, or evidence for her consideration; and conducted a sanctions hearing 
where Phoenix presented live testimony from sixteen character witnesses, the 
testimony of two witnesses by telephone, and testified on his own behalf. 
In her report and recommendation, the successor referee recommended that 
Phoenix be found guilty of violating the Bar Rules charged in the complaint and 
proceedings.  She found that, as counsel for Cay Clubs, Phoenix failed to withdraw 
as counsel despite knowing that he aided his client in committing fraud, concealed 
the true nature of Cay Clubs’s business, and failed to be truthful in statements to 
others.  The successor referee based these findings on the “Non-Prosecution 
 
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Agreement and supporting evidence.”  As a sanction, the referee recommended 
that Phoenix be suspended for ninety days. 
II 
 
On review, Phoenix challenges the appointment of a successor referee, 
alleges that the statute of limitations has expired, disputes the legality of the Bar 
Rule 4-8.4(c) charge, challenges the lack of evidentiary hearing before the 
successor referee, alleges that the burden of proof was improperly shifted, 
challenges the successor referee’s findings of fact and recommendation as to guilt, 
and challenges the successor referee’s recommended sanction as too harsh.  The 
Bar filed a notice challenging the referee’s recommended sanction as too lenient. 
A 
Phoenix’s first five claims do not amount to much, so we address them 
briefly. 
First, we find the appointment of a successor referee was proper.  Phoenix 
cites no authority to support his claim that the same referee must handle a case on a 
remand for further proceedings.  The Bar Rules contain no such requirement.  Nor 
did Phoenix object to the appointment of a successor referee until his appeal to this 
Court, and therefore he did not preserve this issue for review as we have held he 
must.  Fla. Bar v. Picon, 205 So. 3d 759, 764 (Fla. 2016). 
 
- 9 - 
 
Second, the statute of limitations had not run when the Bar initiated its 
proceedings in this matter.  The Bar is required to open an investigation “within 6 
years from the time the matter giving rise to the investigation is discovered or, with 
due diligence, should have been discovered.”  Bar Rule 3-7.16(a)(1).  Phoenix’s 
misconduct occurred from 2005 to 2007.  The Bar received the NPA in 2014 and 
initiated this matter in 2017.  It is true that the NPA was not a “determination or 
judgment of any criminal offense” that would, under the Bar’s rules, have clearly 
required Phoenix to have reported his admitted misconduct.  Bar Rule 3-7.2(e).  
And yet this would have been a different case had Phoenix acted more forthrightly, 
as an officer of the court, and brought the NPA to the Bar’s attention.  He did not.  
On these facts, we cannot say the Bar failed to exercise due diligence in 
discovering Phoenix’s participation in criminal misconduct, and we find that its 
complaint was timely filed in 2017 after its 2014 discovery of the NPA. 
 
Third, Bar Rule 4-8.4(c) was properly charged.  Generally, as a matter of 
due process, the Bar’s complaint must allege all rule violations the Bar seeks to 
prosecute.  In re Ruffalo, 390 U.S. 544, 552 (1968) (“[A]bsence of fair notice as to 
the reach of the grievance procedure and the precise nature of the charges deprived 
petitioner of procedural due process.”).  However, the violation of specific Bar 
Rules not named in the complaint may be considered if such misconduct is “within 
the scope of the Bar’s accusations” and the attorney was “clearly notified of the 
 
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nature and extent of the charges pending against him or her.”  Fla. Bar v. 
Townsend, 145 So. 3d 775, 781 (Fla. 2014).  Bar Rule 4-8.4(c) involves “engaging 
in conduct involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit, or misrepresentation.”  The Bar’s 
complaint clearly accuses Phoenix of engaging in such conduct both when he 
represented Cay Clubs and during the federal investigation of Cay Clubs.  Further, 
the Bar argued that Phoenix violated Bar Rule 4-8.4(c) in the original proceedings 
and in all subsequent appeals.  For years Phoenix has been on notice that the Bar’s 
charges include a violation of Bar Rule 4-8.4(c). 
 
Fourth, the successor referee acted permissibly when she decided not to 
conduct a second evidentiary hearing.  “Due process in Bar disciplinary 
proceedings requires that an accused attorney be given a full opportunity to explain 
the circumstances of an alleged offense and to offer testimony in mitigation 
regarding any possible sanction.”  Fla. Bar v. Baker, 810 So. 2d 876, 879 (Fla. 
2002).  Phoenix had a full opportunity to explain, with ninety minutes of oral 
argument and presentation of eighteen character witnesses to the successor referee.  
What is more, Phoenix consented to shorter proceedings before the second referee 
based on her review of the prior proceedings’s transcript.  A party cannot invite 
supposedly improper proceedings and later complain that the proceedings were 
improper.  See, e.g., Lowe v. State, 259 So. 3d 23, 50 (Fla. 2018) (a party may not 
invite error and then be heard to complain of that error on appeal). 
 
- 11 - 
 
And fifth, the burden of proof did not improperly shift from the Bar to 
Phoenix.  The Bar must prove by “clear and convincing evidence” that Phoenix 
violated each Bar Rule charged.  Fla. Bar v. Rayman, 238 So. 2d 594, 597 (Fla. 
1970).  Phoenix’s own admissions in the NPA are the heart of the Bar’s case.  We 
find Phoenix’s admissions in that agreement to have been clear and convincing 
evidence of his violations within the meaning of our cases. 
B 
 
Competent and substantial evidence supports the successor referee’s 
findings of fact, which in turn support the referee’s recommendations as to guilt.  
This Court’s review is limited to determining whether the factual findings are 
“supported by competent, substantial evidence in the record” and does not include 
“reweigh[ing] the evidence.”  Fla. Bar v. Alters, 260 So. 3d 72, 79 (Fla. 2018) 
(citing Fla. Bar v. Frederick, 756 So. 2d 79, 86 (Fla. 2000)).  For 
recommendations of guilt, this Court’s review is equally limited only to 
determining if the referee’s factual findings support the recommendations.  Id. 
(citing Fla. Bar v. Shoureas, 913 So. 2d 554, 557-58 (Fla. 2005)).  The referee 
based her findings of fact almost entirely on the NPA.  Though Phoenix’s 
testimony later attempted to downplay these admissions, they are in fact competent 
and substantial evidence.  The referee’s factual findings support the successor 
referee’s recommendations of guilt. 
 
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Bar Rule 4-1.16 requires attorneys to decline or terminate a representation if 
the representation results in a violation of the Bar Rules or law, if a client refuses 
to stop acting in a criminal or fraudulent manner, or a client has used the lawyer’s 
services to perpetrate a crime or fraud.  The record demonstrates that Phoenix 
should have terminated his representation of Cay Clubs for all three reasons.  
Phoenix was aware that Cay Clubs “did not heed his advice at times with regard to 
the sale and marketing of the investment” and “continued to work as a lawyer for 
the company despite the principals ignoring his advice.”  Phoenix “received and 
commented on marketing materials where fixed rates of return and leaseback 
payments were promised to potential investors well after he had advised the Cay 
Clubs principals to halt this practice and had obtained opinions from outside 
counsel concerning whether the investment was a security.”  Beyond the marketing 
materials, Phoenix knew that the “leaseback payments made to investors were 
concealed from lenders on [real estate] closing documents . . . when closings were 
conducted and lender financing was obtained.”  These closings “took place in 
Phoenix’s law office” and “at no point during these closings were the leaseback 
payments listed” on the required documents.  “The Cay Clubs principals made 
great efforts to avoid regulation under the securities laws, and Phoenix assisted in 
these efforts.”  Phoenix knew that Cay Clubs was committing fraud and that his 
 
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services were assisting in that fraud, yet he continued to represent Cay Clubs in 
violation of Bar Rule 4-1.16. 
Bar Rule 4-4.1 requires attorneys to be truthful in statements to others when 
representing a client.  Failing to disclose information is considered untruthful if 
“disclosure is necessary to avoid assisting a criminal or fraudulent act by a client.”  
Phoenix’s actions led directly to misleading investors about Cay Clubs’s “inability 
[to] make leaseback payments . . . to lending institutions or future investors when 
ongoing marketing and financing activities took place.”  When Cay Clubs hired 
outside counsel to determine their potential liabilities under securities law, Phoenix 
was aware that “significant aspects of the Cay Clubs business and marketing 
efforts were not disclosed to the outside lawyers.”  Phoenix failed to disclose 
information in order to assist Cay Clubs in criminal and fraudulent acts, thereby 
violating Bar Rule 4-4.1. 
Bar Rule 4-8.4(c) prohibits attorneys from engaging in conduct involving 
dishonesty, fraud, deceit, or misrepresentation.  Phoenix violated this rule both 
through his actions representing Cay Clubs and in the subsequent federal 
investigation.  As Cay Clubs’s counsel, Phoenix “actively participated in the effort 
to try to incorrectly characterize the nature of [Cay Clubs’s] business.”  Closings 
completed in Phoenix’s law office did not disclose the leaseback payments to 
lenders.  During the investigation of Cay Clubs, Phoenix admitted that he had “not 
 
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always been forthcoming” with federal regulators “because he did not want to be 
held accountable for the misconduct at Cay Clubs, or the fraud that took place 
against the investors and the lending institutions.”  Phoenix agreed that in his 
testimony for the federal investigation he had “minimized his role and knowledge 
of the events, and ha[d] sought to avoid his own liability.”  Phoenix was dishonest 
about the nature of Cay Clubs’s business, helped Cay Clubs commit fraud, was 
deceitful towards lending institutions about leaseback payments, and 
misrepresented his unlawful actions to federal investigators.  That violates Bar 
Rule 4-8.4(c). 
C 
 
In light of all this, we cannot say that a ninety-day suspension has a 
sufficient basis under our cases.  “The purposes of attorney discipline are: (1) to 
protect the public from unethical conduct without undue harshness towards the 
attorney; (2) to punish misconduct while encouraging reformation and 
rehabilitation; and (3) to deter other lawyers from engaging in similar misconduct.”  
Fla. Bar. v. Dupee, 160 So. 3d 838, 853 (Fla. 2015).  The successor referee 
correctly relied on Florida Standard for Imposing Lawyer Sanctions (Bar Sanction 
Standard) 7.2 (2015) to determine that suspension is the correct sanction in this 
case.  (“Suspension is appropriate when a lawyer knowingly engages in conduct 
that is a violation of a duty owed as a professional and causes injury or potential 
 
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injury to a client, the public, or the legal system.”).  Because the standards do not 
provide recommendations of suspension length, we look to factually similar cases 
to determine the appropriate length.  Dupee, 160 So. 3d at 853. 
 
The referee did not err in her assessment of aggravating and mitigating 
circumstances.  To impose a sanction commensurate with the misconduct, the 
referee determines what, if any, mitigating and aggravating factors apply.  “[A] 
referee’s findings in mitigation and aggravation carry a presumption of correctness 
and will be upheld unless clearly erroneous or without support in the record.”  
Alters, 260 So. 3d at 82 (quoting Fla. Bar v. Germain, 957 So. 2d 613, 621 (Fla. 
2007)).  The successor referee found one aggravating factor, Bar Sanction Standard 
9.22(g) (2015) (refusal to acknowledge wrongful nature of conduct), and five 
mitigating factors, Bar Sanction Standards 9.32(a) (absence of a prior disciplinary 
record), 9.32(f) (inexperience in the practice of law), 9.32(g) (character or 
reputation), 9.32(i) (unreasonable delay), and 9.32(j) (2015) (interim 
rehabilitation).  The successor referee rejected the other mitigating factors that 
Phoenix offered. 
The aggravating factor is supported by the record because, despite having 
signed an NPA admitting participation in criminal conduct, Phoenix still argued 
that he did not commit misconduct.  Further, Phoenix argued that he repeatedly 
“tried to right the ship” to prevent Cay Clubs’s fraud, that “as soon as he knew 
 
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[about the Ponzi scheme], he sprung into action” to stop it, and claimed that he was 
“the one man who told Cay Clubs [to] shut it down.”  The successor referee 
characterized Phoenix’s narrative as casting “other Cay Clubs executives in the 
role as villain, and himself in the role of hero.  Essentially, he argues that he alone 
tried to thwart the illegal practices, did so valiantly, and singlehandedly shut down 
the sales operations when [his] attempts were ultimately thwarted.”  We cannot 
square that description of his role with his admissions in the NPA or with his 
decision not to bring the NPA to the Bar’s attention. 
The mitigating factors are likewise supported by the record.  The Bar does 
not specifically contest any of the mitigating factors, but highlights that the 
character witnesses presented by Phoenix generally did not know him at the time 
of the misconduct, so the mitigating testimony is about Phoenix’s current character 
or reputation, rather than character or reputation at the time of the misconduct. 
Notwithstanding this correct assessment of aggravating and mitigating 
circumstances, we find a suspension of ninety days to be so brief as to be without 
basis in our law as it has been articulated in similar cases. 
Consider the case of Phoenix’s former colleague, who might have been his 
codefendant under slightly different circumstances.  Fla. Bar v. Callahan, No. 
SC17-539, 2017 WL 1409677 (Fla. Apr. 20, 2017).  Callahan also worked for Cay 
Clubs for a similar length of time and entered into a non-prosecution agreement.  
 
- 17 - 
The Bar alleged that Callahan violated three Bar Rules, the same three as Phoenix, 
and Callahan agreed to a consent judgment for a one-year suspension.  A more 
severe sanction for Phoenix is warranted because key factual differences exist 
between the cases, including Callahan’s consent judgment.  Callahan, through his 
law firm, only served as outside counsel to Cay Clubs, while Phoenix worked 
directly for Cay Clubs, holding the positions of “Senior Vice President and General 
Counsel.”  Beyond differing formal titles, Phoenix knew more about, and was 
more deeply involved in Cay Clubs’s Ponzi scheme.  Unlike Phoenix, Callahan 
“was not involved in the internal operation of Cay Clubs or aware of the fraud 
being committed in the marketing, sales or financing by the principals.”  
Conditional Guilty Plea for Consent Judgment at 2, Callahan, 2017 WL 1409677 
(No. SC17-539).  Callahan received a one-year suspension for knowing about the 
leaseback payments, one element of Cay Clubs’s Ponzi scheme, yet “fail[ing] to 
obtain additional legal opinions and to withdraw from further representation.”  Id. 
at 4.  In contrast, Phoenix admitted that he was aware of and participated in 
multiple facets of Cay Clubs’s Ponzi scheme.  Further, Callahan accepted 
responsibility by entering into a consent judgment for a one-year suspension, while 
Phoenix has consistently refused to acknowledge before the Bar what he 
acknowledged in his NPA. 
 
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Phoenix’s case is also similar to Fla. Bar. v. Dupee; the attorney there 
argued that she did not know that her client was hiding funds during a divorce 
proceeding.  160 So. 3d at 845.  We suspended Dupee for one year, primarily 
because Dupee knowingly allowed her client to submit incomplete financial 
information to the court and opposing counsel.  Id. at 854.  While the Bar here did 
not charge Phoenix with dishonesty towards a tribunal, we find that Phoenix failed 
on numerous occasions to act as an officer of the court, including when he 
knowingly allowed numerous fraudulent HUD-1 statements to be prepared in his 
office—statements without which, he knew, the scheme could not continue. 
Fla. Bar v. Hall, 49 So. 3d 1254 (Fla. 2010), is another case that tells us the 
suspension recommended here is too light.  Hall falsified real estate documents 
and, in one important distinguishing episode, forged signatures.  Hall admitted to 
having committed criminally fraudulent conduct in a deferred prosecution 
agreement; the charges against her were ultimately dismissed because she 
complied with the agreement.  Id. at 1256.  We nonetheless found that Hall 
“engaged in ongoing, continuous misrepresentations for several years,” and that 
disbarment was the appropriate sanction despite the referee’s recommendation of a 
ninety-day suspension.  Id. at 1261, 1263.  There, as here, we do “not look 
favorably on those who use their standing as an officer of the court to deliberately 
 
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harm others—especially when they intentionally hurt members of the public for 
their own personal gain.”  Id. at 1259. 
 
For these reasons, we conclude that Phoenix ought to be suspended from the 
practice of law for two years.  The suspension will be effective thirty days from the 
filing of this opinion so that Phoenix can close out his practice and protect the 
interests of existing clients.  If Phoenix notifies this Court in writing that he is no 
longer practicing and does not need the thirty days to protect existing clients, this 
Court will enter an order making the suspension effective immediately.  Phoenix 
shall fully comply with Rule Regulating the Florida Bar 3-5.1(h).  Further, Phoenix 
shall accept no new business from the date this opinion is filed until he is 
reinstated.  Respondent is further directed to comply with all other terms and 
conditions of the report. 
 
Judgment is entered for The Florida Bar, 651 East Jefferson Street, 
Tallahassee, Florida 32399-2300, for recovery of costs from Charles Paul-Thomas 
Phoenix in the amount of $8,569.96, for which sum let execution issue. 
 
It is so ordered. 
CANADY, C.J., and POLSTON, LABARGA, LAWSON, MUÑIZ, and 
COURIEL, JJ., concur. 
GROSSHANS, J., did not participate. 
 
THE FILING OF A MOTION FOR REHEARING SHALL NOT ALTER THE 
EFFECTIVE DATE OF THIS SUSPENSION. 
 
 
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Original Proceeding – The Florida Bar 
 
Joshua E. Doyle, Executive Director, Patricia Ann Toro Savitz, Staff Counsel, 
Tallahassee, Florida, and Kimberly Anne Walbolt, Bar Counsel, The Florida Bar, 
Tampa, Florida, and Chris W. Altenbernd of Banker Lopez Gassler P.A., Tampa, 
Florida, 
 
for Complainant 
 
Patrick John McGinley of Law Office of Patrick John McGinley, P.A., Winter 
Park, Florida, 
 
for Respondent