John O. Murrin III, who built a successful Twin Cities law practice around the referral service he founded called DIAL L-A-W-Y-E-R-S, was suspended by the Minnesota Supreme Court on Wednesday over a series of verbose, "frivolous" lawsuits he filed seeking to recover his losses from a purported Ponzi scheme.
The court issued a 28-page order suspending Murrin's license to practice law in Minnesota for six months.
Murrin founded a legal referral service in 1977, shortly after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that lawyers could advertise to the public. He sold that business in 2003 but continued to practice law. He is now semi-retired in Long Beach, Calif.
The ruling is just the latest of Murrin's headaches, which began in 2004, when the 61-year-old attorney and his wife invested $600,000 in Avidigm Capital Group Inc., a defunct real estate business based in Lake Elmo. In 2006, Avidigm stopped making interest payments and failed to return the Murrins' principal. A $900,000 security interest Avidigm granted the Murrins to protect their investment turned out to be worth just $200.
Avidigm turned out to be a Ponzi scheme. Murrin helped spur a federal investigation that led to felony charges for Avidigm CEO Steve Mattson and Jim and Teresa Gay Hoffman. Mattson was sentenced to a year in prison. The Hoffmans await sentencing in November on mortgage fraud charges.
'Court got it wrong'
Meantime, Murrin pursued civil remedies with a vengeance, and that led to his suspension.
"I got hit for doing the right thing," Murrin said. "And I'll never back down. I have to say that the court got it wrong and I'll consider a rehearing on this thing."