Pennsylvania Attorney Discipline System: Complaints, Investigations, and Sanctions

The Pennsylvania attorney discipline system governs the professional conduct of lawyers licensed in the Commonwealth, establishing formal processes for receiving complaints, conducting investigations, and imposing sanctions when misconduct is substantiated. Administered primarily through the Disciplinary Board of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, the system operates under the authority of the Pennsylvania Rules of Professional Conduct and the Pennsylvania Rules of Disciplinary Enforcement. Understanding how this system is structured matters for clients who believe their attorney acted improperly, for legal professionals navigating conduct standards, and for researchers examining the regulatory architecture of Pennsylvania's legal profession.


Definition and Scope

The attorney discipline system in Pennsylvania is a regulatory framework — not a civil court mechanism — designed to protect the public and maintain the integrity of the legal profession. Its jurisdiction extends to all attorneys admitted to practice before Pennsylvania courts, including those admitted pro hac vice for individual cases.

The governing authority is the Disciplinary Board of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, which derives its authority from the Pennsylvania Rules of Disciplinary Enforcement (Pa.R.D.E.), promulgated by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court under its inherent constitutional authority over the practice of law (Pennsylvania Constitution, Article V).

The system operates alongside — but independently from — civil malpractice litigation. A disciplinary proceeding addresses whether an attorney violated professional conduct rules; it does not award monetary damages to complainants. Conversely, a civil malpractice judgment does not automatically trigger formal discipline, though courts may refer matters to the Disciplinary Board.

Scope limitations: This framework applies exclusively to attorneys licensed in Pennsylvania. Federal court admission, judicial conduct, and non-attorney legal professionals (paralegals, notaries, title agents) fall outside Disciplinary Board jurisdiction. Judicial conduct is separately regulated by the Pennsylvania Judicial Conduct Board. Federal practitioners in Pennsylvania's 3 federal judicial districts are subject to federal bar rules and are not governed by the Disciplinary Board absent a Pennsylvania license.

For the broader regulatory context governing legal professionals in the Commonwealth, see the Regulatory Context for Pennsylvania U.S. Legal System.


How It Works

The discipline process follows a defined sequence of phases established under Pa.R.D.E. and administered by the Office of Disciplinary Counsel:

  1. Complaint Intake: Any person may submit a written complaint to the Disciplinary Board. Complaints are reviewed by the Office of Disciplinary Counsel to determine whether the allegations, if true, would constitute a violation of the Pennsylvania Rules of Professional Conduct (Pa.R.P.C.).

  2. Preliminary Review: Disciplinary Counsel conducts a threshold assessment. Complaints that do not allege a cognizable ethics violation — disputes over legal strategy, fee disagreements without dishonesty, or dissatisfaction with case outcomes — are typically dismissed at this stage.

  3. Investigation: Where threshold criteria are met, Disciplinary Counsel opens a formal investigation, which may include document subpoenas, attorney responses, and witness interviews. The respondent attorney is notified and afforded an opportunity to respond.

  4. Disposition by Disciplinary Counsel: Following investigation, Disciplinary Counsel may dismiss the matter, issue an informal admonition (a private sanction for minor violations), or file formal charges through a Petition for Discipline.

  5. Hearing: Petitions for Discipline are heard by a three-member panel of the Disciplinary Board, which includes a public member. Proceedings follow formal evidentiary rules.

  6. Board Review: The full Disciplinary Board reviews the hearing panel's recommendation and issues its own recommendation to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court.

  7. Supreme Court Order: The Pennsylvania Supreme Court holds final authority over all sanctions. The Court may accept, modify, or reject the Board's recommendation. (Pa.R.D.E. Rule 208)

The entire record of final public discipline — including disbarments, suspensions, and public reprimands — is published on the Disciplinary Board's public website and is searchable by attorney name.


Common Scenarios

Complaints to the Disciplinary Board fall into identifiable categories based on the type of conduct alleged:


Decision Boundaries

The range of available sanctions under Pa.R.D.E. Rule 204 spans in severity:

Sanction Characteristics
Private Informal Admonition Non-public; minor, isolated violations; no public record entry
Public Reprimand Public record; no suspension; issued directly by the Board or Supreme Court
Probation Attached conditions (CLE requirements, supervision, psychiatric evaluation); typically accompanies other sanctions
Suspension Temporary removal from practice; ranges from 91 days to 3 years; reinstatement requires formal petition
Disbarment Permanent removal in Pennsylvania; an attorney disbarred in Pennsylvania may petition for reinstatement after 5 years under Pa.R.D.E. Rule 218

Informal admonition vs. public reprimand: The critical distinction is public disclosure. An informal admonition remains non-public and does not appear in the Board's public discipline database, while a public reprimand is a matter of permanent public record. The severity of the underlying violation and the attorney's prior disciplinary history typically drive this classification.

The Pennsylvania Supreme Court's final authority means no sanction imposed by the Disciplinary Board is self-executing — every sanction above the informal admonition level requires a Supreme Court order. This places ultimate accountability for attorney licensure with the Court itself, consistent with its constitutional oversight role.

The Pennsylvania bar admission requirements page covers the character and fitness standards that apply before licensure, which intersect with discipline history when a formerly disciplined attorney seeks reinstatement or a new applicant discloses prior conduct.

For a broader overview of how legal professional regulation fits within the state's institutional framework, the Pennsylvania Legal Services Authority index provides an organized entry point to related reference material.


References

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