Attorney Discipline Records

Most of New York's licensed attorneys never face discipline. But when a lawyer is disbarred, suspended, or resigns while under investigation, that outcome becomes part of the public record. This page compiles those records from the New York State Office of Court Administration attorney-registration database, cross-referenced against Consumer Financial Protection Bureau complaint data (debt-collection, mortgage, and lending disputes are where attorney misconduct most often surfaces). Each entry reflects the bar's formal disposition: a recorded finding, not an allegation. See ourmethodology for how we source and verify every figure.

Consumer Complaint Context (CFPB)

Beyond bar discipline, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau tracks consumer complaints about debt collection, mortgage, and lending issues — common areas where attorney misconduct surfaces.

50,212
NY Debt Collection Complaints
26,543
NY Mortgage Complaints
1,042,199
National Debt Collection Complaints

Top NY Debt Collection Issues

  1. 1. Attempts to collect debt not owed 19,773
  2. 2. Written notification about debt 10,490
  3. 3. False statements or representation 4,464
  4. 4. Took or threatened to take negative or legal action 4,438
  5. 5. Communication tactics 3,782

Data through 2026-03-25. Source: CFPB Consumer Complaint Database.

Showing 1,801–1,850 of 2,178 disbarred attorneys

Name Status
Arthur J. Selkin Disbarred
Steven T. Seltzer Disbarred
Robert Victor Semon Disbarred
Soma Sengupta Disbarred
Clay R. Serenbetz Disbarred
Gnoleba Remy Seri Disbarred
Ethan Jordan Serlin Disbarred
Ralph Serpico Disbarred
John A. Servider Disbarred
Lester Noel Shafran Disbarred
Peter William Shafran Disbarred
Vsevolod Shakhanov Disbarred
Adam Keith Shalov Disbarred
Alexander L. Shapiro Disbarred
Daniel J. Shapiro Disbarred
Jerome E. Shapiro Disbarred
Michael Shapiro Disbarred
Phillip E. Shapiro Disbarred
Seth Eben Shapiro Disbarred
Brian F. Shaw Disbarred
Gary Stuart Shaw Disbarred
Timothy Joseph Shea Ii Disbarred
Veronica Ann Shea Disbarred
Mikhail Alexander Shedrinsky Disbarred
Douglas David Sheehan Disbarred
Jeremiah Joseph Sheehan Disbarred
John Vincent Sheehan Disbarred
Thomas Gregory Sheehan Disbarred
Stephen J. Sheinbaum Disbarred
Mathew Ross Sheldon Disbarred
Philip Victor Shelly Disbarred
Robert L. Shepherd Disbarred
Sean Patrick Sheppard Disbarred
Brian Arthur Sheridan Disbarred
Jeffrey Marc Sherman Disbarred
Richard Melvyn Sherman Disbarred
Richard James Sherwood Disbarred
Tushar J. Sheth Disbarred
Liang-Houh Shieh Disbarred
Alan J. Shimel Disbarred
Leonard Scott Shoob Disbarred
Robert G. Short Disbarred
Dmitry Shubov Disbarred
Russell T. Sickmen Disbarred
Philip E. Sicks Disbarred
Anis Ahmad Siddiqi Disbarred
Jeffrey A. Siegel Disbarred
Matthew A. Siegel Disbarred
Neil William Silberblatt Disbarred
Alan Ira Sills Disbarred

Disclaimer: This information is sourced from public state bar records. Discipline status reflects the state bar's records at the time of data collection. PlainAttorney does not provide legal advice. Always verify attorney credentials directly with the relevant state bar.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does it mean when an attorney is disbarred?

Disbarment is the most severe disciplinary action a state bar can take. A disbarred attorney has had their license to practice law permanently revoked, typically due to serious ethical violations, criminal conduct, or repeated misconduct. There are currently 2,178 disbarred attorneys in our records.

How many attorneys have discipline records?

PlainAttorney tracks 24,037 attorneys with discipline records, including 2,178 disbarred, 21,141 suspended, and 718 who resigned while facing discipline. This data comes from public state bar records.

Can a disbarred attorney practice law?

No. A disbarred attorney cannot legally practice law. In some states, a disbarred attorney may petition for reinstatement after a waiting period (typically 5-7 years), but reinstatement is not guaranteed and requires demonstrating rehabilitation and fitness to practice.

Where does this discipline data come from?

All discipline data is sourced from public state bar registration records. These are official records maintained by state bar associations and courts. Data is updated quarterly. For the most current status, consult the relevant state bar directly.