Chia Chwee Imm Helen Mrs Helen Thomas
Findings — machine-extracted (anthropic-batch:claude-opus-4-8); verify against the decision
The Court of Three Judges found due cause for disciplinary action against the Respondent on two charges: acting as an advocate and solicitor without a valid practising certificate while an undischarged bankrupt (from Dec 2016 to May 2018) and wilfully misrepresenting her authority to act (including after disclosing her bankruptcy), and entering into prohibited borrowing transactions by borrowing $40,000 from the client and $20,000 from the client's mother without independent legal advice. The court found express dishonesty in her deliberate misrepresentations that she had annulled her bankruptcy and was personally representing the client in court. Rule 23 of the LPPCR was held to apply even to a lawyer without a valid PC. The court held striking off was the presumptive and appropriate sanction given the character defect revealed and violation of trust, rejecting her mental health plea. The Respondent was struck off the Roll and ordered to pay $28,000 in costs.
Duties found breached:
- No conflict between current clients
- Hold a current practising certificate
- No baseless or threatened misconduct report
Aggravating factors:
- Acted as a solicitor without a valid PC for a prolonged period (about 9 months) despite knowing she was not authorised
- Deliberate and ongoing dishonesty - misled Complainant into believing she had annulment 'sorted', held a PC, and was personally representing her in court
- Created a 'charade' with deliberately timed messages on hearing day to give false impression she attended court
- Violated the trust and confidence in the de facto solicitor-client relationship
- Borrowed $60,000 from the Complainant and her mother while acting as their de facto solicitor without advising them to seek independent legal advice
- Element of undue influence - loans procured when Complainant felt 'trapped' during pending custody proceedings
- Disclosure made opportunistically shortly before an important mediation
Mitigating factors:
- Respondent admitted to both charges and was forthright with the Inquiry Committee
- Expressed remorse and proffered a personal apology
- Prior pro bono contributions to family law, Legal Aid Bureau, mediation and legal charities
- Claimed mental health/depression issues (given little weight, no evidence adduced)