Naeem-ul-Nushad Ahmed
Allegation / charges
Rule 3-7.1 Consent Agreement
Findings — machine-extracted (anthropic-batch:claude-opus-4-8); verify against the decision
Naeem-Ul-Nushad Ahmed, a BC sole practitioner, entered a Rule 3-7.1 consent agreement (approved December 23, 2024) admitting professional misconduct. Between May 2016 and January 2018, across 15 matters and 129 transactions totalling over $31.5 million through his trust account, he failed to guard against being the tool/dupe of an unscrupulous client (a known fraudster, AA), failed to make reasonable inquiries into client identities, beneficial ownership, source/purpose of funds, and failed to keep records of inquiries despite numerous red flags. No express finding of dishonesty was made. He agreed to a one-month suspension commencing February 28, 2025. The Law Society's significant investigative delay was a key mitigating factor; no fine or costs were noted.
Duties found breached:
- Handle inadvertently received material
- No baseless or threatened misconduct report
- No improper use of client money
- No taking unfair advantage
Aggravating factors:
- 15 matters and 129 transactions over an extended period (May 2016 to January 2018)
- Over $31.5 million passed through the firm's trust account
- Numerous unaddressed red flags including involvement of a known fraudster and undischarged bankrupt (AA), numbered companies concealing beneficial ownership, unclear source of funds, and urgent/complex transactions
- Funds suspected to be proceeds of crime; declined bank's request to delay a transaction
Mitigating factors:
- No prior professional conduct/disciplinary record
- Significant Law Society investigative delay (accepted as a significant mitigating factor affecting suspension length)
- Cooperation via consent agreement and Agreed Statement of Facts
- Lawyer improved office and record-keeping practices since the investigation
- Lawyer acknowledged his conduct was not excused