A former partner at a top law firm has been described as a 鈥渂it touchy feely鈥 by his lawyer after he took two female interns on a drunken trip to a sex shop.
Richard Dean Palmer - known as Dean Palmer - was found guilty of a range of misconduct charges last year for the incident as well as two other incidents involving junior colleagues.
Five people came forward, including three young women, from Palmer鈥檚 workplaces to paint a picture of sexual harassment and inappropriate behaviour spanning almost three years.
Today, the Lawyers and Conveyancers Disciplinary Tribunal met to decide on a penalty for Palmer and heard submissions from his lawyer that he was simply a 鈥渃reature of his generation鈥 and a tactile person, and that he hadn鈥檛 intended any sexual harassment or overtone.
The New Zealand Law Society was seeking a suspension of 18 months or two years for Palmer and said it was in the same realm of offending as聽who was found guilty of six charges of misconduct, including for touching interns inappropriately at work functions in 2015.
The charges
The first charge against Palmer relates to an incident in 2015 while working for the firm Anderson Lloyd where Palmer took two female law clerks to lunch at a BYO restaurant.
After an hour or more both women started to receive texts from their colleagues asking where they were and both became anxious to return to work.
However, Palmer took them to another venue to purchase some stronger liquor which both women poured out when he wasn鈥檛 looking.
He then took them back to the office car park and instead of going back to work he steered both women to drink at another place nearby and reassured them they could blame him for being late.
Palmer took both women inside an adult sex shop and began talking to the shop assistant.
The interns told the tribunal they felt uncomfortable and 鈥渨eird鈥 about the situation with Palmer obtaining business cards from the store assistant, and handing them to the clerks.
They made it to the final venue where they drank some more before returning to the office at about 5pm.
The women described feeling obliged to go along with whatever Palmer was suggesting because of the power imbalance between them as summer clerks and him as a senior member of the firm.
鈥淲e regard Mr Palmer鈥檚 apparent lack of awareness of this dynamic as reprehensible,鈥 the tribunal said in its decision last year.
鈥淗e also plied them with liquor, having taken them to a venue where it was not easy for them to 鈥榚scape鈥, that he then insisted on further alcohol intake at two further venues and that he embarked on the highly inappropriate activity of taking them into an adult sex shop.
鈥淲e definitely consider that his behaviour would be considered by right-thinking members of the profession as disgraceful and dishonourable.鈥
Anderson Lloyd notified Palmer two days after the lunch that the situation would be investigated and suspended him from being in the office. His employment with the firm ended not long after.
In another incident in 2017, while working for Duncan Cotterill, during a lunch where 鈥渁 large amount of alcohol was consumed鈥, Palmer leaned in close to a woman, patted her on the knee and stroked her hair and shoulder. When she moved seats to get away from him he followed her.
The woman, an intermediate solicitor, likened the behaviour to 鈥渟omething a father might do鈥 but was not appropriate between a senior colleague and an employee. She said it made her feel particularly uncomfortable.
Another charge related to a series of emails between Palmer and a first-year lawyer at the firm where he suggested taking her out to dinner in an email sent at 9pm on the same night the inappropriate touching occurred.
鈥淚 promise not to bite. Well not hard,鈥 one of the emails read, which Palmer said was an attempt at humour that had fallen flat.
Submissions
The New Zealand Law Society鈥檚 lawyer Sally Carter told the tribunal today it was seeking an 18-month to two-year suspension as a starting point for Palmer.
She said that at the last hearing he appeared to show 鈥渧ery little insight鈥 into his offending.
鈥淗e accepted things were unwise but he really didn鈥檛 understand the impact that his behaviour had on those junior lawyers,鈥 Carter said.
Carter noted that the case wasn鈥檛 as serious as the one against Gardner-Hopkins where the starting point had been for him to be struck off.
James Gardner-Hopkins. Photo / Supplied
鈥淲hile this conduct is not as serious, it nevertheless is not that far removed from it especially when you look at the repetitive nature of what has occurred here.鈥
All Palmer鈥檚 victims were granted name suppression and only one of them was interested in receiving compensation from him, which the Law Society sought today.
Carter said it wasn鈥檛 her aim to 鈥減arade鈥 Palmer in front of the tribunal and seek an over-extreme example of him, but public confidence in the legal profession needed to see him punished appropriately for his actions.
Palmer鈥檚 lawyer Philippa Fee said that in the 鈥渢wilight years鈥 of his career, a suspension would effectively be a striking off.
鈥淚t will be the death knell of his career,鈥 she said of the 65-year-old.
In her submissions she said the offending was the only blemish on his extensive career and he had learned his lesson, learning to maintain a professional distance with colleagues despite being an eager socialite.
Fee described him as potentially being a 鈥渂it touchy feely鈥 and a 鈥渃reature of his generation鈥, before explaining that people of Palmer鈥檚 age were generally more tactile and socially vivacious.
鈥淪ome practitioners have not caught up with the new normal,鈥 she said.
The tribunal questioned Fee鈥檚 assertion that there was no sexual overtone to any of Palmer鈥檚 conduct.
鈥淩eally?鈥 one tribunal member asked. 鈥淎ll of the complainants are young women. I don鈥檛 imagine he felt the need to stroke a male colleague鈥檚 hair or take them to a sex shop.
鈥淒oesn鈥檛 the fact it all has to do with women make it sexual in nature?鈥
Fee said that Palmer could easily have touched a male colleague鈥檚 arm or patted them on the back, but it 鈥渕ight be a little weird鈥.
鈥淲hy would it be a little weird if it was a man but not a woman?鈥 another tribunal member asked. 鈥淪urely he wouldn鈥檛 have stroked your hair?鈥
Fee: 鈥淚f we鈥檇 been out for lunch for five hours and drinking, maybe?鈥
Overall, Fee said Palmer had learned his lesson and had extensive character witnesses describing him as socially outgoing and whose successful 42-year career had hinged on these interactions with clients and colleagues.
He accepted he should have kept his hands to himself and since the investigation into his conduct, had come to understand that the power imbalance between a senior partner and a female intern was what was most inappropriate about the incidents.
She opposed compensation for the one victim who wanted it being as high as $12,000, and said that decisions in the Human Rights Review Tribunal had seen compensation in the area of $5000 to $10,000 for far-more serious sexual offending.
The tribunal reserved its decision.
- Jeremy Wilkinson, Open Justice
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