Paul Christopher Doroshenko
Allegation / charges
Rule 3-7.1 Consent Agreement | Summary
Findings — machine-extracted (anthropic-batch:claude-opus-4-8); verify against the decision
In a Rule 3-7.1 consent agreement, Vancouver lawyer Paul C. Doroshenko, QC admitted to numerous trust accounting failures between 2013 and 2019, including misappropriating/improperly withdrawing $44,353.19 from trust in 82 instances, failing to maintain sufficient trust funds, late deposits, commingling his own funds in trust, improper disbursement withdrawals totaling $65,021.76, inadequate staff supervision, and making untrue Trust Report representations. The misconduct stemmed largely from data-entry errors, staff misconduct, an accountant's failures, and the lawyer's diminished oversight following a concussion and other medical/workplace issues. No express finding of dishonesty was made; he had no intent to misuse funds and derived no personal gain, reimbursed the funds, and no clients were harmed. He agreed to a two-month suspension and additional CPD trust-accounting credits.
Duties found breached:
- Accounting records, reconciliation and reports
- No baseless or threatened misconduct report
- No improper use of client money
- Proper basis for allegations
- Self-report to the regulator
- Supervise staff and delegated work
Mitigating factors:
- No prior professional conduct record
- Took full responsibility, apologized, and expressed remorse
- Cooperated fully and promptly with audit and investigation
- Implemented improved accounting procedures
- Agreed to complete trust accounting courses
- Reimbursed missing trust funds; no clients harmed
- No intent to misuse trust funds and no personal gain derived
- Suffered a serious concussion and slip-and-fall injuries during the material period affecting his oversight
- Relied on accountant (AB) and staff who concealed/downplayed problems
- Firm remained solvent throughout