In the legal field, maintaining the integrity of client funds is a foundational duty. When that trust is breached through misappropriation, the consequences are final. For Elizabeth-based attorney Rodrigo Sanchez (Attorney No. 034892000), a long history of disciplinary issues culminated in a permanent disbarment by the Supreme Court of New Jersey.
Effective July 1, 2025, Sanchez was officially stripped of his license to practice law, marking the end of a career that spanned over two decades in the Garden State.
The Final Ruling: Knowing Misappropriation (2025)
The decision to disbar Sanchez (Docket No. DRB 24-213) was the result of a severe pattern of financial mismanagement and ethical violations. The Court found that Sanchez violated several Rules of Professional Conduct (RPC), including:
-
Knowing Misappropriation: The Court identified four distinct instances where Sanchez knowingly misappropriated client or escrow funds. Under the landmark Wilson and Hollendonner cases, knowing misappropriation of client funds in New Jersey almost invariably results in disbarment.
-
Commingling Funds: Sanchez was found to have mixed personal funds with client funds in his trust accounts on multiple occasions.
-
Unreasonable Fees: The investigation revealed that Sanchez charged fees deemed unreasonable under RPC 1.5(a).
-
Supervisory Failures: He failed to adequately supervise non-lawyer staff, making him responsible for conduct that would have been a violation if engaged in by a lawyer.
A Decadelong Pattern of Misconduct
The 2025 disbarment was not Sanchez’s first encounter with the Disciplinary Review Board. His record shows a progression of increasingly severe sanctions:
-
2010 (Public Censure): Sanchez was censured following a criminal conviction for attempted grand larceny. The case involved a complex scheme where a client attempted to extort a professional basketball player; Sanchez was arrested while attempting to accept the settlement check.
-
2013 (Public Reprimand): He was reprimanded for lacking diligence and failing to protect a client’s interests. His absence from a trial led to the dismissal of a client’s case.
-
2024 (Public Reprimand): Just one year before his disbarment, Sanchez was reprimanded for negligent misappropriation and recordkeeping failures after his trust account was overdrawn by a small amount, triggering an audit that uncovered systemic deficiencies.
Federal Reciprocal Discipline
The “domino effect” of a state disbarment is swift. Following the New Jersey Supreme Court’s order, the U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey issued its own order of reciprocal discipline.
On August 19, 2025, Chief Judge Renee Marie Bumb signed an order disbarring Sanchez from practicing before the federal court. This ensures that an attorney found unfit to practice at the state level cannot continue to represent clients in the federal system.
Conclusion: Protection of the Public
The disbarment of Rodrigo Sanchez serves as a stark reminder of the “no-tolerance” policy regarding client funds in New Jersey. While his career included representing clients in antitrust and trade law, his failure to safeguard the fiduciary relationship led to the ultimate professional sanction. For legal consumers, this case highlights the importance of checking the Office of Attorney Ethics records to verify an attorney’s standing.
