                 IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

                         FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT

                         _____________________

                              No. 96-30851
                         _____________________



LARRY D. CROWE, ET AL.,

                                                         Plaintiffs,

                                versus

JAMES W. SMITH, ET AL.,

                                                         Defendants,

MICHAEL P. TONE; ANNE FIEDLER;
ROBERT B. BIECK, JR.; JAMES W.
BERRY; WILLIAM E. WRIGHT;
JUDY L. BURNTHORN; W. GLENN
BURNS; AMERICAN CASUALTY COMPANY
OF READING, PENNSYLVANIA,

                                                      Appellants.
_________________________________________________________________

      Appeals from the United States District Court for the
                  Western District of Louisiana
_________________________________________________________________
                         August 12, 1998

Before JOHN R. GIBSON,* JOLLY, and EMILIO M. GARZA, Circuit Judges.

E. GRADY JOLLY, Circuit Judge:

     American Casualty Company of Reading, Pennsylvania (“CNA”1),

Michael P. Tone, Anne Fiedler, W. Glenn Burns, Robert B. Bieck,

Jr., William E. Wright, Judy L. Burnthorn, and James W. Berry

    *
        Circuit Judge for the Eighth Circuit, sitting by designation.
        1
      “CNA” is an acronym for a group of insurance companies, one
of which is American Casualty Company--the “A” in “CNA.”
Continuing the practice of the parties and the district court, we
will refer to American Casualty Company as CNA in this opinion.
(collectively, the “sanctions defendants”) appeal the imposition of

sanctions against them by Judge Nauman S. Scott of the Federal

District Court for the Western District of Louisiana.

      All of the defendants are attorneys except for CNA. After the

settlement of an underlying civil action in which these attorneys

were involved as either defense counsel or insurer’s counsel, the

district court was advised by the plaintiffs that an applicable

insurance policy issued by CNA (the “D&O Policy”) had not been

disclosed to them, although its existence had long been known to

the   sanctions   defendants.     The   district    court   appointed    the

attorney for the plaintiffs in the underlying case to investigate

and present evidence to the court of the offense.                After the

conclusion of a civil bench trial, the district court entered an

extensive opinion, which included numerous findings of fact and

conclusions of law.    Briefly stated, the district court held that

the   sanctions   defendants    willfully    conspired   to    defraud   the

plaintiffs by concealing the D&O Policy despite having discovery-

related, ethical, and other duties to disclose it.             Acting under

its inherent power, the court then imposed sanctions consisting of

fines, reprimands, and suspensions from the practice of law.                In

particular, it imposed fines of $5 million on CNA and $75,000 on

Tone.   All fines were made payable to the district court.

      We hold that the district court abused its discretion by

imposing   serious   criminal    sanctions    on   CNA   and   Tone   via   a

manifestly civil process.       The sanctions against those defendants

are therefore reversed.        Furthermore, and although we find the

procedure to have been adequate as to the suspended and reprimanded
defendants,     we    also   hold     that       the   district      court   abused   its

discretion      as    to   all   of   the    sanctions       defendants,      save    the

defendant Berry, in finding that they engaged in bad faith conduct

by failing to disclose the D&O Policy.                   Because a finding of bad

faith is a prerequisite to the exercise of a court’s inherent

power, we therefore reverse the district court’s judgment as to

defendants Burns, Bieck, Wright, Fiedler, and Burnthorn as well.

In addition, as to defendants CNA, Tone, Fiedler, and Burnthorn, we

also hold that the record is completely insufficient to support a

finding    of   bad    faith     conduct.         As    to   those    defendants,     the

sanctions proceeding is dismissed.                     With respect to defendants

Burns, Bieck, and Wright, we find the record potentially sufficient

to support a finding of bad faith conduct, and remand the case to

the district court for further consideration in the light of our

opinion.     We affirm the sanctions imposed against Berry.

                                             I

        The sanctions proceeding in this case concerned the actions of

several attorneys during a period of time leading up to the

signature of a settlement agreement in a civil RICO2 suit.                             To

understand the significance of those actions, it is necessary

briefly to review the circumstances of that case.

        In December 1992, as the latest installment of a long and

tangled saga of partnership litigation, Larry D. Crowe and the

    2
     Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, 18 U.S.C.
§ 1961 et seq. (“RICO”).




                                             3
Succession of Reba Coody Crowe (the “Crowes”) brought suit against

James W. “Sonny” Smith in the Federal District Court for the

Western District of Louisiana.           The Crowes alleged, among other

things, that Smith, who was a former business partner of Larry

Crowe,     conspired   with    Peoples    Homestead     Savings    and   Loan

Association of Monroe, Louisiana, (“Peoples”) to defraud the Crowes

of their interest in certain commercial agricultural property in

violation of RICO.     Also made defendants in this suit were Russell

Hart, the former president of Peoples, and several of Peoples’s

former directors and outside attorneys.          Eventually, the case was

set for trial on July 12, 1994, in Monroe, Louisiana.

      Most of the sanctions defendants served as defense counsel in

the 1992-94 litigation. Berry represented four former directors of

Peoples.     Bieck, Wright, Burnthorn, and Burns represented various

of the outside attorneys.         The remaining individual sanctions

defendants, Tone and Fiedler, represented CNA as coverage counsel

and   were   not   directly   involved    in   the   case.   The   following

chronology traces the activities of these attorneys in the months

leading up to the trial.       It is based on the factual findings of

the district court, which in all relevant respects are undisputed.

      Late into the litigation--in March 1994--as part of his

research for the upcoming trial, Bieck made a fateful discovery

among the files of one of the attorney defendants.           He learned that

in 1983, CNA had issued a directors’ and officers’ errors and

omissions policy--the D&O Policy--to Peoples.            This policy was a




                                     4
“claims made” policy, and carried a general liability limit of $5

million.          It expired in 1986, but not before Larry Crowe had

brought suit against Peoples under a conversion theory in February

of that year.3         Shortly thereafter, the directors of Peoples began

corresponding with CNA regarding Crowe’s claims.4                 It was this

correspondence that Bieck discovered in March 1994.               He conveyed

his findings almost immediately to Burnthorn.

     Three         weeks   later,   the   Crowes   issued   certain   discovery

requests to counsel for each of the director defendants and one of

the attorney defendants, Johnny Dollar.5             Dollar was represented,

significantly, by Wright and Burnthorn.             The discovery requests in

question were for the production of certain described documents.

Two are relevant to this case:

     5.           All claims or notices of claim that were
                  transmitted to any of your insurance carriers in
                  relation to any of the claims of Larry Crowe and/or
                  the Succession of Reba Crowe.

     8.           All indemnity agreements related to service as bank
                  officer, director, attorney, or representative.




          3
        This suit was an earlier chapter in the same epos of
litigation to which the 1992 suit belonged. A successor to the
1986 suit eventually settled, resulting in a complex transfer of
funds, property rights, and liabilities between Peoples and Larry
Crowe.
          4
        At about this time, CNA opened a file for the Crowe
litigation.
              5
         Dollar was included in this request because                    he   had
subsequently served on Peoples’s board of directors.




                                          5
It is important to note that these discovery requests were very

significant ones in the Western District in 1994. Although Fed. R.

Civ. P. 26(a)(1)(D) generally provides for the automatic disclosure

of relevant insurance policies, the Western District had opted out

of that provision in its local rules.        See ULLR 6.06W (1994).        At

the time, the only way for a party to find out about insurance

policies   in   the   Western   District   was   by   way   of    a   properly

propounded discovery request.

     On April 27, Berry responded to the discovery requests on

behalf of three of his four director clients. He answered Requests

5 and 8 with the words “none” or “none known.”          On that same day,

Burnthorn faxed Berry a copy of the CNA correspondence first

discovered by Bieck. At this point, Burnthorn also began preparing

a letter to CNA requesting defense and indemnification for her

client, Dollar, under the D&O Policy.      On April 28, she faxed Berry

a copy of this letter as well, so that he could use it as a model

for letters written on behalf of his clients.         On April 29, one of

Berry’s director clients sent such a letter to CNA.              Letters from

two of the other directors followed soon thereafter.

     On May 1, Burnthorn responded to the discovery requests on

behalf of Dollar.     Her response to Request 5 read as follows:

     Response to request #5: New England Insurance Company
     and the Home Insurance Company have been notified of
     plaintiff’s lawsuit. Dollar objects to the request on
     grounds of attorney-client privilege and work product
     immunity.




                                    6
     On May 5, Berry responded to the discovery requests on behalf

of his fourth and final director client.    His answers to Requests

5 and 8 for this client were identical to the ones he had sent the

week before on behalf of the other directors--in the negative.

     On May 12, Fiedler wrote to Burnthorn advising that CNA was

proceeding under a reservation of rights with respect to the D&O

Policy, and requesting certain additional information.   On June 7,

Burnthorn provided this information.

     As the trial drew nearer, settlement negotiations intensified.

On June 23, Berry made a written offer to settle on behalf of the

directors for $10,000.    He emphasized in this letter that his

clients were not insured, and did not have access to substantial

funds for settlement purposes.       The Crowes counter-offered for

$25,000.

     On June 30, CNA made a formal response to the notice of

lawsuit letters sent by Berry’s and Burnthorn’s clients.        CNA

advised that the D&O Policy was a $5 million indemnity policy that

might not provide coverage for several reasons, and that CNA would

be proceeding under a reservation of rights to deny coverage.     A

specimen policy was attached to the responses.

     During the week of July 4, Wright, Bieck, and Burns attempted

to negotiate a settlement on behalf of their clients and two other

insurers.6   Their offer was rejected, whereupon they discussed

    6
    New England Insurance Company and Home Insurance Company, the
two insurers referenced in Burnthorn’s above-quoted discovery




                                 7
among themselves the possibility of coverage under the D&O Policy

and the feasibility of bringing CNA and Berry’s director clients

into a global settlement.        On July 7, Wright informed Bieck that he

would be speaking with CNA representatives the next day about the

possibility of CNA contributing to a global settlement. On July 8,

the telephone conference took place as scheduled, with Berry,

Wright, Tone, and Fiedler in attendance.            During the conversation,

Tone stated that he had not yet received authority to commit any

money to a settlement fund, and that no one should raise the

possibility   of    a   CNA    contribution      with   the   Crowes.    Wright

subsequently relayed the substance of this conversation to Bieck.

     On July 11, the day before the trial began, Tone wrote to

Wright and Berry informing them that CNA was willing to contribute

to a settlement package.         On this same day, and obviously before

receiving the letter, Wright, Bieck, and Burns met to discuss the

possibility of making a global settlement offer, which would

include CNA, prior to the commencement of the trial.                    In this

conversation,      Wright     reminded   Burns    and   Bieck   that    CNA   had

requested that its possible inclusion in a global settlement not be

disclosed.    Later that afternoon, Wright, Bieck, and Burns, along

with Smith’s attorney, met with the Crowes’ counsel to discuss

settlement.     The Crowes made an offer of $6.2 million.                 Burns




response.




                                         8
replied that this figure was far beyond any theory of insurance

coverage.      No one at the meeting objected to this statement.

     The trial began as scheduled on July 12.            Shortly thereafter,

Berry spoke to Tone regarding the payment of his fees by CNA.                  On

July 13, Tone sent a letter to Berry advising him that CNA would

pay $25,000 for the legal fees of his clients.                Later that same

day, Berry continued to pursue his $10,000 settlement offer with

the Crowes’ counsel.        During these discussions, one of the Crowes’

lawyers remarked that he was surprised that the directors had no

insurance.     Berry replied that there was an old policy, but that it

had lapsed and his clients were not covered by it.

     At this point, Burns became the chief settlement negotiator

for all of the defendants.          On July 21, Burns received word from

Berry   that    CNA   had   given   Tone    authority   to   make   a    $100,000

contribution to the settlement.            Berry also relayed that Tone had

reiterated his request that the source of the $100,000 remain

anonymous.

     At a meeting on July 26, Wright reminded Bieck and Burns of

CNA’s request for anonymity.         The three discussed the matter, and

agreed that CNA’s participation ought to be revealed.                   They also

decided that discovery responses should be checked to see if anyone

had breached a duty to disclose the D&O Policy.                 Bieck raised

particular concern about Berry’s discovery responses.               The meeting

was then adjourned to check those responses. Wright consulted with

Burnthorn about the responses they had given, and concluded that




                                       9
they were adequate.   Bieck, Wright, and Burns each attempted to

check Berry’s responses, but apparently none of them had brought

those documents along.   No one followed up on this with Berry.

     On July 27, Tone and Fiedler arrived in Monroe to monitor the

settlement progress directly.   On this day, they were able to have

a number of discussions with various of the defense counsel during

breaks in the ongoing trial.    First, Berry asked Tone to increase

the amount of CNA’s contribution.      Tone had authority to do this,

and accordingly upped CNA’s offer to $150,000.      Tone then raised

the subject of disclosure and was informed by Hart’s7 attorney that

the settlement would fall apart if CNA were revealed.     After these

exchanges, Burns informed the Crowes’ counsel that the attorney and

director defendants would meet the Crowes’ prior settlement offer

of $2.25 million.     Back in the defense camp, the subject of

disclosure arose one last time.    Wright told Tone that he thought

CNA’s contribution should be revealed.     Tone apparently concurred.

Tone and Fiedler then departed Monroe.

     The Crowes accepted the $2.25 million offer, and the substance

of the agreement was recited to the court that same day by Burns.

The court recessed the trial so that a final written agreement

could be prepared and signed.       Bieck subsequently drafted that

agreement.   In it, the name “American Casualty Company” appeared

once, along with several other insurers, in a long section titled

     7
      Again, Peoples’s former president, and one of the principal
defendants in the underlying suit.




                                  10
“Settling Defendants.”     The agreement was signed on July 28.       On

that same day, Berry sent a letter to Tone informing him that the

language in the final agreement did not specifically say “CNA.”

CNA subsequently made its promised payment anonymously through

Wright and Burnthorn.

     With respect to Hart and Smith, the trial continued.         At its

conclusion, the jury returned a verdict in favor of the Crowes for

$8.5 million.   This figure was subsequently trebled in accordance

with the statute.    Both Hart and Smith appealed that judgment to

this court.8

     During the pendency of that appeal, Joseph R. Ward, Jr., the

Crowes’ principal     attorney   throughout   the   1992-94   litigation,

conducted a judgment debtor examination of Hart.         As a result of

that examination, Ward discovered the D&O Policy.

                                   II

     On November 15, 1994, the district court received a letter

from Ward addressed to eleven of the defense counsel.          It stated

that he had recently become aware of the D&O Policy, and that he

believed there may have been a number of instances where the

defense attorneys violated their discovery obligations by not




     8
      As we shall    see, Hart subsequently settled with the Crowes.
Smith pressed on     with his appeal, however, and on February 26,
1996, this court    reversed the verdict and rendered in his favor.
Crowe v. Smith,      No. 94-41205, 81 F.3d 155 (5th. Cir. 1996)
(unpublished).




                                   11
revealing the policy to him.            He gave notice that he was preparing

a motion to set aside the settlement and sanction the directors.

       After receiving the letter, the court had several ex parte

contacts with Ward in an attempt to determine what action should be

taken on the matter of the sanctions.                As the court has since

repeatedly emphasized, it was in a quandary because neither it nor

Ward    knew   any     facts    that    might   substantiate   or   refute   the

allegations of misconduct.             Ward subsequently brought his motion,

however, and the court then decided that it would conduct an

informal meeting with all of the defense attorneys to discuss the

situation.     At that meeting, it was decided that a full-fledged

trial would be held to resolve the question.                   This trial was

originally scheduled for September 6.             Based on its conversations

with Ward, however, the court had already become convinced at the

time of the informal meeting that the directors would likely enter

into a renewed settlement with the Crowes, and that sanctions might

well be waived therein.          Concerned for its own judicial integrity,

the    court   began    to     consider   bringing   an   alternate   sanctions

proceeding itself, on its own motion.             To investigate and, if need

be, prosecute that action, the court appointed Ward as attorney for

the United States in the matter.            The court made this choice based

on Ward’s existing familiarity with the case and a lack of viable

alternatives. Ward accepted the appointment, and informed the U.S.

Attorney for the Western District of Louisiana of his new status.




                                          12
     Shortly thereafter, the U.S. Attorney’s civil and criminal

section chiefs paid a visit to the court to discuss the case.    The

civil chief declined to pursue the matter himself, as he did not

consider the sanctions to be civil in nature.   The criminal chief

indicated that he would be willing to pursue the matter as a

criminal case, if the court declared it to be such.      The court

declined his offer on the grounds that it “did not consider the

defendants criminals,” and continued its employment of Ward. After

reflecting on the meeting, however, the court did change Ward’s

title, designating him attorney for “the court” instead of “the

United States.”

     On June 10, CNA and its counsel procured a new settlement with

the Crowes,9 who then, as the district court feared, stopped

prosecution of their sanctions motion.   The court then entered its

own motion for sanctions pursuant to its inherent power.10      Ward

dutifully investigated the facts of the settlement negotiations and

presented them to the court during a rescheduled bench trial.

Based on its conversations with the U.S. Attorney’s office, and

because it was concerned with the possibility that Ward would be

erroneously viewed as a “prosecutor,” the court expressly limited


     9
      For an additional $4 million. In addition to the Crowes’
claims against the clients of the attorney sanctions defendants,
this settlement also terminated the Crowes’ claims against Hart, as
he was also covered by the D&O Policy.
     10
      As opposed to its power under Fed. R. Civ. P. 11, which is
not implicated here.




                                13
him, at all times, to a role of gathering and presenting the

evidence.    In particular, the court “kept its own counsel” as to

relevant legal theories, the designation of defendants, and the

overall appropriateness of sanctions, with the sole exception that

the defendants were allowed to present briefs on the legal issues.

The court did, however, engage in a few additional ex parte

contacts with Ward during the investigation period, in an effort to

resolve procedural questions relating to his representation and to

ensure that the subjects that the court found most relevant were

adequately investigated in discovery.     It was also the case that

Ward testified at the trial in addition to serving as the court’s

attorney.    The defendants, for their part, were at all times

represented by counsel, and were able to hear and respond to all

the evidence accumulated against them.    After extensive discovery

and some five days of trial, on July 25, 1996, the court found the

conduct of the defendants sanctionable.   The court raised multiple

theories of liability, but the essential basis for its judgment was

the finding that all of the sanctions defendants had willfully

conspired to defraud the Crowes by concealing the D&O Policy from

them despite having discovery-related, ethical, and other duties to

reveal it.   Based on this finding, the court ordered the following

sanctions: (1) for CNA to pay $5 million to the court; (2) for Tone

to pay $75,000 to the court;11 (3) for Berry to be suspended from

    11
      One might wonder what the district court intended to do with
this money. It seems that the general plan was to create a fund




                                 14
practice before the Western District of Louisiana for a period of

nine months; (4) for Wright, Burns, and Bieck to be suspended from

practice before the Western District of Louisiana for a period of

three months; and (5) for Fiedler and Burnthorn to be reprimanded.

The sanctions defendants appeal this judgment on multiple grounds.

                                     III

     We review a district court’s imposition of sanctions under its

inherent power for abuse of discretion.         Dawson v. United States,

68 F.3d 886, 895 (5th. Cir. 1997); Chambers v. NASCO, Inc., 501

U.S. 32, 55 (1991).      Nonetheless, “the threshold for the use of

inherent power sanctions is high.”         Elliot v. Tilton, 64 F.3d 213,

217 (5th Cir. 1995).     The inherent power “is not a broad reservoir

of power, ready at an imperial hand, but a limited source; an

implied power squeezed from the need to make the court function.”

Chambers,   501   U.S.   at   42   (quoting   NASCO,   Inc.   v.   Calcasieu

Television and Radio, Inc., 894 F.2d 696, 702 (5th Cir. 1990)).

Perhaps for this reason, we have repeatedly emphasized that, where

the inherent power is involved, “‘our review is not perfunctory.’”

Dawson, 68 F.3d at 896 (quoting Shepherd v. American Broadcasting

Companies, 62 F.3d 1469, 1475 (D.C. Cir. 1995)).          “As the Supreme

Court has explained, ‘[b]ecause inherent powers are shielded from

direct democratic controls, they must be exercised with restraint




from which the court could pay appointed counsel to prosecute this
and other sanctions actions throughout the Western District.




                                     15
and discretion.’”     Shepherd, 62 F.3d at 1475 (quoting Roadway

Express, Inc. v. Piper, 447 U.S. 752, 764 (1980)).

                                IV

     The sanctions defendants argue that the district court abused

its discretion in two main respects in this case.          First, they

assert that the court deprived them of their right to due process

by imposing criminal sanctions on them via a manifestly civil

process. Second, they argue that the court clearly erred in making

its required finding of bad faith conduct.            We address each

contention in turn.

                                   A

     The sanctions defendants first argue that the district court

deprived them of their right to due process by imposing criminal

sanctions in a civil proceeding.       In particular, they contend that

their due process rights were infringed because the district court

appointed Ward to “prosecute” their sanctions.       They insist that,

because Ward’s other clients, the Crowes, were the purported

victims of the fraud, and maintained private rights of action for

any wrongdoing, he was not a disinterested prosecutor, as required

for the prosecution of criminal sanctions.        In this regard, they

also note that Ward had a personal interest in finding their

conduct sanctionable, in the sense that, if the conduct of his

former opponents had been found to be unobjectionable, he would

have faced potential malpractice liability for his own failure

earlier to locate the D&O Policy.        In addition to these problems




                                16
associated    with    Ward   serving   as   “prosecutor,”    the    sanctions

defendants also assert separate due process violations based on the

fact that Ward both testified and served as attorney, and the fact

that he had ex parte contacts with the court.                After lengthy

consideration, we find substantial merit in these due process

arguments as applied to defendants CNA and Tone, but not as to

defendants Burns, Bieck, Wright, Fiedler, Burnthorn, and Berry.

                                       1

     As the sanctions defendants correctly point out, and as the

Supreme Court has often explained, the initial touchstone for

determining the due process rights of a sanctions defendant lies in

the characterization of the particular contempt as either “civil”

or “criminal”:

     Because   civil  contempt   sanctions  are   viewed  as
     nonpunitive and avoidable, fewer procedural protections
     for such sanctions have been required. To the extent
     that such contempts take on a punitive character,
     however, and are not justified by other considerations
     central to the contempt power, criminal procedural
     protections may be in order.


International Union, United Mine Workers of America v. Bagwell, 512

U.S. 821, 831 (1994); see also Hicks v. Feiock, 485 U.S. 624, 632

(1988) (in a contempt action, as in any other, “criminal penalties

may not be imposed on someone who has not been afforded the

protections    that    the   Constitution    requires   of   such    criminal

proceedings”).




                                       17
     As the Supreme Court has also made clear, “conclusions about

the civil or criminal nature of a contempt sanction are properly

drawn . . . ‘from an examination of the character of the relief

itself.’”   Bagwell, 512 U.S. at 828 (quoting Hicks, 485 U.S. at

635).   In this case, we are presented with two principal types of

“relief”:   fines   payable   to   the   court    for   CNA   and   Tone,   and

suspensions from practice or official reprimands for Burns, Bieck,

Wright, Fiedler, Burnthorn, and Berry.           We consider each class of

relief in turn.




                                    18
                                 2

     We begin with the fines imposed on CNA and Tone.   With regard

to these sanctions, we have little difficulty in finding that they

were criminal in character.    As the Supreme Court has expressly

stated:

     A contempt fine . . . is civil and remedial if it “either
     coerce[s] the defendant into compliance with the court’s
     order, [or] . . . compensate[s] the complainant for
     losses sustained.” Where the fine is not compensatory,
     it is civil only if the contemnor is afforded an
     opportunity to purge. Thus, a “flat, unconditional fine”
     totaling even as little as $50 announced after a finding
     of contempt is criminal if the contemnor has no
     subsequent opportunity to reduce or avoid the fine
     through compliance.


Bagwell, 512 U.S. at 829 (quoting United States v. Mine Workers,

330 U.S. 258, 303-04 (1947), and Penfield Co. of Cal. v. SEC, 330

U.S. 585, 590 (1947), respectively); cf. In re Terrebonne Fuel and

Lube, Inc., 108 F.3d 609, 612 (5th Cir. 1997) (“If the purpose of

the order is to punish the party whose conduct is in question or to

vindicate the authority of the court, the order is viewed as

criminal.   If, on the other hand, the purpose of the contempt order

is to coerce compliance with a court order or to compensate another

party for the contemnor’s violation, the order is considered to be

civil.”).    Because the fines in this case were payable to the

court, they were not compensatory.     Because they were also flat

fines that did not afford an opportunity to purge, they were

criminal in character.     To the extent that the district court

concluded to the contrary, it was clearly in error.




                                 19
     Having determined that the fines were criminal in character,

the question becomes whether the procedures applied by the district

court were adequate for criminal contempt.               In Young v. United

States ex rel. Vuitton et Fils S.A., 481 U.S. 787, 804 (1987), the

Supreme    Court   held    that   “[a]    private     attorney   appointed   to

prosecute a criminal contempt . . . should be as disinterested as

a public prosecutor who undertakes such a prosecution.”                 In this

case, Ward’s concurrent representation of the Crowes, who retained

substantial    possibilities      for      private    recovery   against     the

defendants, coupled with his own potential malpractice liability

for the events at issue, combine to belie any contention that he

was “as disinterested as a public prosecutor.” There can therefore

be no doubt that, at least to the extent that Ward was in fact

allowed to serve as “prosecutor,” the district court failed to

follow the command of Young.        Furthermore, the argument that Ward

was not actually acting as a prosecutor--in the sense that he only

investigated and presented the evidence, leaving to the judge and

defendants the entirety of the legal argument--is of no moment in

this context.      As we have expressly held in the past, where

criminal    contempt      is   involved,      there   must   actually   be    an

independent prosecutor of some kind, because the district court is

not constitutionally competent to fulfill that role on its own.

See FDIC v. LeGrand, 43 F.3d 163, 169 & n.6 (5th Cir. 1995); see

also Fed. R. Crim. P. 42(b); cf. Young, 481 U.S. at 798-99 (noting

other general requirements of criminal procedure in the contempt




                                         20
context,    including       a   presumption     of   innocence,        the     beyond-a-

reasonable-doubt          burden    of    proof,     the      right    against     self-

incrimination, the right to notice, the right to be heard, the

right to counsel, the right to call witnesses, the right to an

unbiased judge, and the right to a jury trial where the contempt is

serious).      Thus, in whatever way the situation is characterized,

the district court would appear to have violated CNA and Tone’s

right to due process by denying them an independent and impartial

prosecutor for the manifestly criminal sanctions that it imposed.

      One response to this reasoning might be that the Supreme Court

in   Bagwell    stopped     short    of    saying    that      the    full     range   of

traditional criminal procedural protections is mandated in every

criminal contempt proceeding. As noted above, the rule of that case

was simply that “criminal procedures may be in order,” if the

imposition of contempt is not “justified by other considerations

central to the contempt power.”            Bagwell, 512 U.S. at 831 (emphasis

added).     Thus, it might perhaps be argued that the lack of an

independent and impartial prosecutor was somehow justified in this

case by such “other considerations.”

      Upon closer inspection, however, this response lacks merit.

The Bagwell Court identified only two classes of criminal contempt

in which the “other considerations” might indicate a lesser degree

of procedural protection.            The first is the case of the “direct

contempt”   committed       “in    the    presence       of   the    court,”    and    the

rationale      is   the    quite    sensible       one     that     “[t]he     necessity




                                           21
justification for the contempt authority is at its pinnacle . . .

where contumacious conduct threatens a court’s immediate ability to

conduct its proceedings.”    Bagwell, 512 U.S. at 832.     The second

exception is for “petty” fines, which the district court has been

traditionally allowed to impose in a summary manner. See id. at 837

n.5 & 838-39.   Although our own recent decision in Carroll v. The

Jaques Admiralty Law Firm, P.C., 110 F.3d 290, 293 (5th Cir. 1997)

(Jones, J.), would appear to indicate either that a $7000 fine is

“petty,” or that “direct contempt” includes the disruption of

ongoing, out-of-court discovery,12 nothing in that case or Bagwell

can be read as saying that there is any “other consideration” that

might justify curtailed criminal procedures for the imposition of

$5 million and $75,00013 fines to punish a months-old discovery

violation in a long-settled case.     Indeed, the Bagwell Court was

quite clear that for “indirect [criminal] contempts” involving, for

example,   “out-of-court   disobedience   to   complex   injunctions,”

criminal protections are clearly “necessary and appropriate to

protect the due process rights of parties and prevent the arbitrary

exercise of judicial power.”    Id. at 833-34; cf. Green v. United

     12
      See also Bagwell, 512 U.S. at 833, with regard to the proper
procedure for such ongoing discovery violations.
      13
       We need not decide today what the precise limit is for a
“petty” fine, because $75,000 is manifestly non-petty in the case
of an individual, just as $5 million is non-petty in the case of a
corporation. We note, however, that the Bagwell Court strongly
suggested, without deciding, that $5000 was an appropriate limit
for individuals, and $10,000 for corporations. See Bagwell, 512
U.S. at 837 n.5.




                                 22
States, 356 U.S. 165, 217 n.33 (1958) (Black, J., dissenting)

(“Alleged contempts committed beyond the court’s presence where the

judge has no personal knowledge of the material facts are especially

suited for trial by jury.          A hearing must be held, witnesses must

be called, and evidence taken in any event.           And often . . . crucial

facts are     in   close    dispute.”).       For   this    reason,   we   see   no

justification here for a departure from the mandate of Young, and

therefore    conclude      that   the   district    court   committed      a   clear

violation of CNA and Tone’s right to due process in this case when

it imposed determinative criminal fines on them without affording

the benefit of an independent and impartial prosecutor.14                      These

sanctions must therefore be reversed and vacated.15

                                         3

     We turn next to the suspensions and reprimands meted out to

sanctions defendants Burns, Bieck, Wright, Fiedler, Burnthorn, and

Berry.     Although these sanctions present a very close question, we

are ultimately persuaded by our clear precedents that they are not




     14
      And, of course, potentially in a number of other respects as
well, as the majority of the other standard criminal protections
noted by the Court in Young, 481 U.S. at 798-99, were ignored in
this case as well.
      15
      We note in passing that our judgment on this point accords
in both reasoning and result with the Eleventh Circuit’s decision
in In re E.I. Dupont de Nemours & Co.-Benlate Litigation, 99 F.3d
363 (11th Cir. 1996) (finding the imposition of a $6.8 million
determinative fine without benefit of criminal procedural
protections to violate due process under Bagwell and Hicks).




                                         23
so criminal in character as to render the district court’s chosen

procedures faulty.

     We must concede, however, an initial impression that Bagwell

appears to mandate the opposite result.               In addition to the above-

discussed analysis of criminal versus civil character in the fine

context, the Court noted in that case that, as a general matter,

sanctions that serve to “vindicate the authority of the court” are

criminal    in    character.      Bagwell,      512   U.S.    at    828;       see   also

Terrebonne, 108 F.3d at 612 (“If the purpose of the order is to

punish the party whose conduct is in question or to vindicate the

authority    of    the   court,   the    order   is    viewed      as   criminal.”).

Suspensions and reprimands surely serve to accomplish the goal of

vindication, so to that extent they would appear to be criminal in

character.

     In this case, however, our investigation cannot be limited to

so simplistic an analysis.               Unlike some of the other likely

candidates    for    use   as   contempt      sanctions,     those      that    address

attorney    discipline     have   been     squarely    placed      in    a   decidedly

different and grayer area by both the Supreme Court and our own past

decisions.       See, e.g., Cammer v. United States, 350 U.S. 399, 408

n.7 (1956) (“‘The power to disbar an attorney proceeds upon very

different grounds’ from those which support a court’s power to

punish for contempt.”) (quoting Ex Parte Robinson, 86 U.S. (19

Wall.) 505, 512 (1873)); Ex Parte Wall, 107 U.S. 265, 288 (1883)

(stating that a disbarment proceeding requires no formal indictment,




                                         24
because it “is not for the purpose of punishment, but for the

purpose of preserving the courts of justice from the official

ministration of persons unfit to practice in them”); Johnson v.

Ayers, 921 F.2d 585, 586 (5th Cir. 1991) (Wisdom, J.) (“‘Disbarment

proceedings are not for the purpose of punishment, but rather seek

to determine the fitness of an official of the court to continue in

that capacity and to protect the courts and the public from the

official ministration of persons unfit to practice.’”) (quoting In

re Derryberry, 72 B.R. 874, 881 (Bankr. N.D. Ohio 1987)).         As we

recently restated the matter in Dailey v. Vought Aircraft Co., 141

F.3d 224 (5th Cir. 1998), “disbarment is intended to protect the

public” in addition to being “a ‘punishment or penalty imposed on

the lawyer,’” and it is therefore “quasi-criminal in nature.”       Id.

at 229 (quoting In re Ruffalo, 390 U.S. 544, 550 (1968)).       Although

both the Supreme Court and this court have often relied on this

“quasi-criminal” characterization to hold that “an attorney is

entitled to procedural due process which includes notice and an

opportunity to be heard in disbarment proceedings,” see, e.g.,

Dailey, 141 F.3d at 229; Ruffalo, 390 U.S. at 550, we have only

rarely gone farther.16    Cf. In re Ming, 469 F.2d 1352, 1355 (7th

Cir.   1972)   (“‘All   that   is   requisite   to   their   [disbarment

proceedings] validity is that, when not taken for matters occurring


       16
        In this case, there is obviously no contention that the
district court failed to provide either adequate notice of the
sanctions or an opportunity to be heard.




                                    25
in open court, in the presence of the judges, notice should be given

to the attorney of the charges made and opportunity afforded him for

explanation and defence.’”) (quoting Randall v. Brigham, 74 U.S. (7

Wall.) 523, 540 (1868)).       Indeed, even in the limited instances

where this court has mandated specific additional protections, the

manner in which we have done so leaves the unmistakable impression

that “quasi-criminal” means “less than criminal” for due process

purposes.      See, e.g., In re Thalheim, 853 F.2d 383, 388 n.9 (5th

Cir.   1988)     (requiring   “clear-and-convincing”      evidence   of    a

disbarrable offense, rather than proof “beyond a reasonable doubt,”

as a blind application of full criminal contempt procedure would

suggest).17    Furthermore, and as noted in Cammer, the imposition of

disciplinary     sanctions    itself    implicates   an   independent     and


       17
       But see Thalheim, 853 F.2d at 388 (also requiring that the
court’s disciplinary rules be read strictly, resolving any
ambiguity in favor of the person charged, in an unexplained but
obviously intentional application of criminal law’s rule of
lenity). In response to that point, we can only note that the
question whether the rule of lenity is even a fundamental
requirement of due process in more traditional criminal settings is
a question of some complexity.
     We should also note that the other major additional procedural
protection that we have specifically mandated for disbarment
cases--the requirement that the district court strictly abide by
such rules of disciplinary enforcement as it has created, see
Thalheim, 853 F.2d at 388--is not implicated in this case, because
the Western District of Louisiana, unlike the Eastern District, did
not have such rules at the time these sanctions were imposed. Cf.
ULLR 83.2.10E (1994). As such, we need only analyze the procedures
actually employed to see if they meet the requirements of due
process. Cf. Ming, 469 F.2d at 1355 (“The district courts are free
to adopt their own local rules defining grounds for disbarment and
suspension and the procedures to be followed. But these rules must
meet the requirements of due process.”).




                                       26
fundamental duty of the district court--the supervision of the

attorneys who practice as members of its bar--in ways that other

sanctions simply cannot.   Cf. RTC v. Bright, 6 F.3d 336, 340 (5th

Cir. 1993) (“It is beyond dispute that a federal court may suspend

or dismiss an attorney as an exercise of the court’s inherent

powers.”); Howell v. State Bar of Texas, 843 F.2d 205, 206 (5th Cir.

1988) (“Since the early days of English common law, it has been

widely recognized that courts possess the inherent power to regulate

the conduct of attorneys who practice before them and to discipline

or disbar such of those attorneys as are guilty of unprofessional

conduct.”); Flaksa v. Little River Marine Constr. Co., 389 F.2d 885,

889 n.10 (5th Cir. 1968) (“‘The power of a court to discipline

members of its own bar can scarcely be doubted seriously.        An

attorney is under no obligation to seek admission to the bar of a

United States district court.    He is at liberty to abstain from

membership in that or any other bar.   But when he does apply and is

admitted he secures certain privileges and also assumes definite

obligations.   The power of a court to impose appropriate and

reasonable sanctions upon those admitted to its bar is a familiar

phenomenon and lies within the inherent power of any court of

record.’”) (quoting Gamble v. Pope & Talbert, Inc., 307 F.2d 729,

735 (3d Cir. 1962) (Biggs, CJ., dissenting)); Woodham v. American

Cystoscope Co., 335 F.2d 551, 557 (5th Cir. 1964) (referencing

Gamble and noting that appropriate “modes of discipline against the

attorney might include: (1) a reprimand by the court, (2) a finding




                                 27
of contempt, or (3) a prohibition against practicing for a limited

time before the court whose order was neglected or disregarded”)

(quoting Comment, Sanctions at Pre-Trial Stages, 72 Yale L. J. 819,

830 (1963)); Roadway Express, Inc. v. Piper, 477 U.S. 752, 766 n.12

(1980) (citing Chief Judge Biggs’s dissent in Gamble with approval).

Thus, whatever might be the implications of the more general

statements in Bagwell--and we also note, for the record, that

Bagwell did not directly address the status of disbarments or other

disciplinary sanctions--in the light of the extensive disciplinary

case law we have cited, we are constrained by binding precedent to

reject the sanctions defendants’ invitation in this case to apply

a blunt requirement of full criminal procedure to every disbarment

that the district courts of this circuit choose to issue in the

exercise of their inherent power.           Even more surely, our precedent

emphatically dismisses such extensive procedural hoop-jumping for

the far less serious disciplinary sanctions of suspension and

reprimand.       In resolving this case, we must simply remain content

to     retain    the   vague,    “quasi-criminal”     designation   that    our

precedents have expressly chosen to place upon such sanctions, and

conduct our due process analysis on that basis.

       In so doing, we may rely on the well established propositions

that    “[t]he     fundamental    requirement    of    due   process   is   the

opportunity to be heard ‘at a meaningful time and in a meaningful

manner,’”       Mathews v. Eldridge, 424 U.S. 319, 333 (1976) (quoting

Armstrong v. Manzo, 380 U.S. 545, 552 (1965)), and that “[t]he very




                                       28
nature of due process negates any concept of inflexible procedures

universally applicable to every imaginable situation,” Cafeteria &

Restaurant Workers Union v. McElroy, 367 U.S. 886, 895 (1961).

Stated another way, due process, “‘unlike some legal rules, is not

a technical conception with a fixed content unrelated to time,

place, and circumstances.’”     Mathews, 424 U.S. at 334 (quoting

McElroy, 367 U.S. at 895).   In each individual case, identification

of the specific dictates of due process is “guided by a Mathews v.

Eldridge balancing which requires the weighing of the private

interests affected by the official action, the risk of erroneous

deprivation through the existing procedure, and the government’s

interest in minimizing its administrative and financial burdens.”

Metro County Title, Inc. v. FDIC, 13 F.3d 883, 887 (5th Cir. 1994)

(citing Mathews, 424 U.S. at 334-35); cf. Santosky v. Kramer, 455

U.S. 745, 753-54 (1982) (applying the Mathews test and requiring

only a “fundamentally fair procedure” for the state to terminate the

rather weighty rights of parentage); Burnett v. Collins, 982 F.2d

922, 928 n.8 (5th Cir. 1993) (Garwood, J.) (noting that, even in a

criminal case where evidentiary errors have occurred, due process

requires nothing more than “a fundamentally fair trial”); Link v.

Wabash Railroad Co., 370 U.S. 626, 632 (1962) (noting that the

“adequacy of notice and hearing respecting proceedings that may

affect a party’s rights turns, to a considerable extent, on the

knowledge which the circumstances show such party may be taken to

have of the consequences of his own conduct”).   Furthermore, it is




                                  29
well established that, even where the sanction is patently criminal,

“[u]nless     an    action   violates       a   specific    provision     of    the

Constitution, the due process clause requires ‘only the most basic

procedural safeguards.’”       Young v. Herring, 938 F.3d 543, 557 n.3

(5th Cir. 1991) (King, J.) (quoting Patterson v. New York, 432 U.S.

197, 210 (1977)).

     That said, just which “basic procedural safeguards” will be

generally implicated by imposition of the “quasi-criminal” sanction

of disbarment is a close and vexatious question.                      It is not,

however, a question that requires a thorough answer at the present

juncture, so long as we remain focused, as we surely must, on the

specific faults alleged by the sanctions defendants in the instant

case: First, Ward’s service as “prosecutor”; second, the fact that

he testified in addition to serving as attorney; and third, his ex

parte contacts with the court.          We address each in turn.

                                        a

     With regard to Ward’s service as prosecutor, our decision in

NASCO, Inc. v. Calcasieu Television and Radio, Inc., 894 F.2d 696

(5th Cir. 1990) (Higginbotham, J.), is largely dispositive of the

issue.    In that case, the district court imposed, among other

things,   a   compensatory    civil     sanction    of     attorney’s    fees   and

expenses,     and    a   “quasi-criminal”       sanction     of   a     three-year

disbarment, against G. Russell Chambers, the owner of Calcasieu

Television, and A. J. Gray, his chief attorney, in response to a

“long and arduous campaign of fraud, deceit, delay, harassment,




                                        30
oppression and expense” in Calcasieu’s litigation of a contract

claim brought against it by NASCO.      See NASCO, Inc. v. Calcasieu

Television and Radio, Inc., 124 F.R.D. 120, 143-45 (W.D. La. 1989).

The motion for monetary sanctions had been brought by NASCO, and it

was resolved by way of a one-day bench trial in which each side was

allowed to present evidence and argue the merits of its position.

Gray’s disbarment, on the other hand, was brought by the court, and

legal argument on the issue was limited to the court’s own research

and such briefs as the parties chose to submit after the hearing on

the monetary sanctions.18    In response to Gray’s argument on appeal

that he had been deprived of his right to due process, and in

particular of his right to a disinterested prosecutor for the

“criminal” sanction of disbarment, we stated:

     [W]e are not persuaded that NASCO’s “prosecution” of the
     sanctions proceeding violated the strictures of Young v.
     United States, 481 U.S. 787, 107 S.Ct. 2124, 95 L.Ed.2d

     18
          As the district court itself described the procedure:

     . . . We finally decided that NASCO’s counsel would
     certainly make application for sanctions in the form of
     attorney’s fees and expenses. The Court would rely on
     that application and the oppositions filed by defendants
     for investigation and the appropriateness of that kind of
     sanction. The Court would rely on its own research and
     any additional research that we might request of the
     parties regarding the imposition of other types of
     sanctions. On appeal, NASCO’s counsel is to defend the
     entire judgment of this Court, including sanctions other
     than attorney’s fees and expenses.      If sanctions are
     found and become final, they shall include the attorney’s
     fees and expenses of NASCO’s counsel in representing
     NASCO and the public in the sanction phase of this suit.

NASCO, 124 F.R.D. at 137.




                                   31
     740 (1987). There the Court held the appointment of the
     opposing counsel in the underlying litigation to
     prosecute a criminal contempt proceeding violated due
     process.   The Court reasoned that counsel could not
     adequately represent the interests of the government and
     the interests of his private client at the same time.
     107 S.Ct. at 2135-2139. Gray argues that because we have
     characterized a disbarment proceeding as quasi-criminal,
     In re Thalheim, 853 F.2d 383, 388 (5th Cir. 1988), the
     reasoning in Young should apply. We are unable to find
     any authority to support Gray’s contentions and he points
     us to none. Further, we conclude that the danger present
     in Young, that private counsel would be overzealous in
     the contempt proceedings in an effort to further the
     interest of his client, was not present here.         The
     arguments of counsel at the hearing were devoted entirely
     to the issue of monetary sanctions.      The court later
     relied on its own research, aided by any briefs the
     parties wished to file, in determining the propriety of
     nonmonetary sanctions. 124 F.R.D. at 137, n.10. The
     court thus avoided placing NASCO’s counsel in the role of
     prosecutor for the disbarment proceedings.

NASCO, 894 F.2d 707-08.

     We read NASCO as standing for the proposition that Young is not

infringed, even where the district court relies on interested

opposing counsel to present the facts19 giving rise to an imposition

      19
       Although Judge Higginbotham’s description might leave some
room for ambiguity, in point of fact there can be no doubt that the
district court in NASCO relied primarily on the extensive factual
development of the monetary sanctions proceeding in finding Gray
disbarrable. As the following excerpt of its findings makes clear,
the court disbarred Gray on the basis of a wide variety of actions
and culpable mental states derived from the whole course of
Chambers’s scheme, including much out-of-court plotting and other
activity that the court could not possibly have known about save
for the trial:

     . . . In his conduct in this case, Gray has actively
     violated almost every one of [his] ethical and
     professional responsibilities. He accepted and tried a
     case for the explicit purpose of doing injustice, i.e.,
     he used every means at his disposal to defeat a perfectly
     legal and enforceable purchase contract against which he




                                 32
of the quasi-criminal sanction of disbarment, so long as the court

relies on its own research (as supplemented by appropriate briefing

by the parties) with regard to relevant legal issues and the overall

appropriateness of disbarment.   The logic would appear to be that,

by avoiding putting opposing counsel in the position of making legal

argument in favor of disbarment, the court sufficiently avoids



     well knew his client had no defenses. He misused the
     injunction notice given by NASCO.          He devised a
     fraudulent and illegal scheme to deprive this Court of
     the jurisdiction which it had at the time NASCO's notice
     was delivered on Friday, October 14, 1983. The sale to
     the Trust as attempted was an absolute simulation and
     totally void and incomplete at the time it was recorded.
     It was recorded in haste for the purpose of rendering the
     impending injunction ineffective. He not only failed to
     disclose essential and pertinent facts, he actively
     misled the Court and recorded his conversation with the
     Court without disclosing to the Court his intent to do
     so.   By these actions the Court was forced to delay
     action on the merits until it was determined by trial
     that the Court again had jurisdiction. During this delay
     Gray utilized his legal skills and experience to lead, on
     behalf of Chambers, a campaign of harassment, oppression
     and delay sufficient to force NASCO to spend over a
     million dollars in attorney’s fees and expenses to defend
     its rights to the performance of a perfectly legal and
     enforceable   contract.      More   amazing,   this   was
     accomplished without the introduction by defendants of
     one single item of evidence against the validity of the
     Purchase Agreement. This case is unique. The manner in
     which it was conducted by Gray is a disgrace to the legal
     profession. It is our reluctant duty as a sanction to
     disbar Gray from practice as an attorney in the Western
     District of Louisiana . . .

NASCO, 124 F.R.D. at 144-45. In this regard, it might also be
noted that the above description of Gray’s conduct was part and
parcel of the court’s unified and consistent description of
Chambers’s entire “campaign,” which surely would not have been the
case had Gray been afforded the benefit of factual development
independent of the monetary sanctions proceeding.




                                 33
placing him in the role of prosecutor so as to escape the mandate

of Young.20   Whatever we might think of this reasoning as a de novo

matter, we are of course bound by our prior circuit precedent and

must accept NASCO’s rule in this case.    See Hogue v. Johnson, 131

F.3d 466, 491 (5th Cir. 1997) (Garwood, J.) (“One panel of this

Court may not overrule another (absent an intervening decision to

the contrary by the Supreme Court or the en banc court . . .).”).

Furthermore, were we to consider the question afresh, we would note

that the “compromise” nature of the NASCO rule seems to us to be

highly consistent with other aspects of the murky “quasi-ness” of

disbarment’s criminal character, including particularly the use of

a “clear-and-convincing” (as opposed to “beyond-a-reasonable-doubt”)

burden of proof, and the fact that the normal criminal requirement

that there actually be a separate prosecutor does not appear to

apply in the disciplinary context.

     In applying the NASCO rule to this case, our review of the

record casts no doubt on the district court’s express assurance

that, in order to “‘preserve the court’s independent thought,’ Ward

was restricted to a statement of the facts.”          He “conducted

investigations, took depositions, collected other evidence, and

cross-examined witnesses,” but he “was not allowed to present

argument, submit legal authorities after trial, or suggest the


         20
         Young does not, of course, apply to civil sanctions
proceedings. See, e.g., Portland Feminist Women’s Health Center v.
Advocates for Life, Inc., 877 F.2d 787, 790 (9th Cir. 1989).




                                  34
sanctions to be imposed.”        On those matters, as well as on the

selection of the particular defendants to be charged, the court

“kept its own counsel.”          With the exception of the issues of

attorney testimony and ex parte contacts discussed separately below,

we can find no serious deviation21 from the procedure expressly

approved in NASCO,22 and therefore conclude that the employment of

Ward   as   “prosecutor”   did   not   violate   the   remaining   sanctions

defendants’ right to due process.

                                       b

       We turn next to the question of attorney testimony.          On this

point, we are confronted with less precedent, but an arguably

clearer answer.      Although Rule 3.7 of the Louisiana Rules of

Professional Conduct (applicable to attorneys practicing before the

Western District, see ULLR 83.2.4W (1994)) is clear that “[a] lawyer

shall not act as advocate at a trial in which the lawyer is likely

to be a necessary witness” (with exceptions not applicable here),

local ethical rules are “not the ‘sole’ authority governing motions

to disqualify counsel.”      FDIC v. United States Fire Ins. Co., 50

F.3d 1304, 1312 (5th Cir. 1995). Federal courts decide such motions

on the basis of federal, not state, law, and “‘consider the motion

       21
       Indeed, to the extent that Ward, unlike NASCO’s attorneys,
was not arguing a live sanctions motion of his own while presenting
the evidence forming the basis for disbarment, this case arguably
presents a far less problematic scenario.
       22
      A fact that is not in the least surprising, given that Judge
Scott was the very district judge whose procedures we affirmed in
NASCO.




                                       35
governed by the ethical rules announced by the national profession

in the light of the public interest and the litigant’s rights.’”

Id. (quoting In re Dresser Indus., 972 F.2d 540, 543 (5th Cir.

1992)). Although local ethical rules are certainly relevant to that

analysis, they are not dispositive.

     Furthermore, and as numerous courts and commentators have

recognized, the only justification for the attorney testimony rule

that might be viewed as affecting the rights of the opposing party

is that derived from the fear that the jury will either accord such

testimony undue weight, or will be unable to distinguish between the

attorney’s testimony, offered under oath, and his legal argument,

offered in rhetorical support of his client’s case.           See, e.g.,

Dawson v. Orkin Exterminating Co., 736 F.Supp. 1049, 1054 (D. Col.

1990) (noting that the rule “is designed primarily to preclude the

unseemly   situation   in   which   the   lawyer   must   argue   his   own

credibility before the jury”); In re Whitney-Forbes, Inc., 31 B.R.

836, 842 (Bankr. N.D. Ill. 1983) (“The principal danger which

results from having active participation by an attorney who will be

a witness is that a jury will accord a disproportionate weight to

his testimony.”); People v. Superior Court of San Luis Obispo

County, 84 Cal. App. 3d 491, 501 (Cal. Ct. App. 1978) (noting that

“the reluctance of courts to allow such testimony . . . is the

danger that a jury would believe the . . . attorney to be more

credible than an ordinary witness”); Greenebaum-Mountain Mortgage

Co. v. Pioneer National Title Ins. Co., 421 F.Supp. 1348, 1354 (D.




                                    36
Col. 1976) (citing the “fear that the statements of counsel in

closing arguments might bear too much weight with the jury, since

the jury previously observed the attorney taking an oath to tell

only the truth”); cf. United States Fire Ins. Co., 50 F.3d at 1311

(generally noting the reasons for the rule); 6 Wigmore on Evidence

§ 1911 (1940 ed.) (same). As the majority of these courts have also

recognized, this justification is inapplicable where, as here, the

testimony is made to a judge, not a jury.          See Orkin, 736 F.Supp.

at 1054 (“Here, . . . counsel testified in a hearing before [a

judge] . . . .       The rule is therefore inapplicable.”); Whitney-

Forbes, 31 B.R. at 842 (“That problem does not exist in a bench

trial.”); Superior Court, 84 Cal. App. 3d at 501-02 (noting that

“where the . . . attorney will only be testifying at pretrial

hearings where the trier of fact is a judge, not a jury, th[e]

danger does not exist”); Greenebaum-Mountain Mortgage Co., 421

F.Supp. at 1354 (“Because this case involves a trial to the court,

rather than to a jury, we are confident that the finder of fact can

make the necessary distinctions.”).

       In the light of this wide swath of opinion on this particular

rule   of   the   “national   profession,”   and   in   the   light   of   the

additional fact that the attorney testimony rule has been held to

be completely inapplicable to attorney pro se litigants, see Duncan

v. Poythress, 777 F.2d 1508, 1515 n.21 (11th Cir. 1985) (also

noting, consistent with the above cases, that, because “a judge was

the trier of fact, . . . there was no danger that the trier of fact




                                     37
could not distinguish between testimony and advocacy”), we find no

merit to the contention that allowing Ward to testify at the bench

trial in this case could have infringed the remaining defendants’

right to due process.23

                                c

     We come, then, to the final alleged procedural defect: Ward’s

ex parte contacts with the court.    After extensive research, we

could locate no Fifth Circuit case that found ex parte “contacts”

to constitute a reversible violation of due process.   What we did

find were a vast number of cases holding the contrary--often in far




     23
      We also note that, as a practical matter, such testimony will
often be necessary. One of the primary justifications for allowing
opposing counsel to present evidence in these cases is the fact
that he will already be familiar with the underlying events, having
taken part in the proceedings in which the allegedly improper
conduct by his opponent occurred. In these circumstances, it is an
almost foregone conclusion that counsel will also have relevant
evidence of those proceedings. If we are to abide by NASCO and
allow the district court a workable way to investigate these
matters, we must accept the admittedly unusual fact of attorney
testimony as part of the bargain.




                                38
more serious criminal and deportation contexts.24     Other courts

treat such claims similarly.25

     24
      See, e.g., Herring, 938 F.2d at 557 (King, J.) (“Because the
ex parte instruction in the instant case does not implicate a
specific constitutional provision, [the defendant] must demonstrate
that, based on all the circumstances, the instruction prevented him
from receiving a fair and just hearing.”) (citing United States v.
Widgery, 778 F.2d 325, 330 (7th Cir. 1985)); United States v.
Patterson, 809 F.2d 244, 248 (5th Cir. 1987) (“The defendants argue
that the district court’s ex parte, in camera procedure violated
their   rights    under   the   confrontation    and   due   process
clauses . . . . We need not consider these claims because any
possible errors made by the district court in connection with its
ex parte, in camera inquiry would be harmless.”); Vardas v.
Estelle, 715 F.2d 206, 208 (5th Cir. 1983) (“The district court in
denying habeas corpus in this case determined that the ex parte
procedure followed here violated state procedures, but was not in
violation of constitutional due process. A state court’s failure
to follow its own procedural rules does not of itself raise a
federal constitutional question cognizable in habeas corpus.”); In
re Eisenberg, 654 F.2d 1107, 1112 (5th Cir. Unit B Sept. 4, 1981)
(finding no due process violation for ex parte hearings on
discovery questions); Chan v. INS, 634 F.2d 248, 258 (5th Cir.
Jan. 15, 1981) (“[The deportee] argues that the immigration judge,
at the time of his motion to reopen, violated due process when he
engaged   in   ex   parte   communications    with   a   deportation
officer . . . . Chan has failed to make any allegation that the
alleged ex parte communications between the immigration judge and
the deportation officer at the time of the motion to reopen
prejudiced the merits of his case. Therefore, he may not claim
that his due process rights were violated.”).
    25
     See, e.g., United States v. Lutz, No. 95-17040, 103 F.3d 142,
1996 WL 711435 (9th Cir. 1996) (unpublished) (“[The defendant]
contends that his due process rights were violated in the course of
this section 2255 motion because the district court . . . allowed
[the government] to file ex parte motions . . . . [T]he district
court did not exceed its authority when it . . . allowed the
government to file ex parte motions.”); In re Grand Jury Subpoena,
72 F.3d 271, 276-77 (2d Cir. 1995) (stating, in the context of
discussing whether the failure to provide a witness with ex parte
material submitted by the government and reviewed in camera by the
court violated that witness’s due process rights in a subsequent
proceeding to hold him in contempt for refusing to testify, that
“while this procedure does not occur frequently, it is not
forbidden when justified”); In re Grand Jury Witness, 835 F.2d 437,




                                 39
     Based on this rather extensive tradition of affording little

or no weight to isolated ex parte contacts, and in the light of the

fact that our review of the record reveals the contacts in this case

to have been limited to the most de minimis and harmless procedural

matters (such as ascertaining whether Ward would indeed prosecute

a sanctions motion on the Crowes’ behalf, so the court could decide

whether it need even consider bringing its own motion, and directing

that discovery be conducted in certain areas that the court had

itself determined to be particularly relevant), we find no merit to

the contention that the ex parte contacts rendered the proceeding

“fundamentally unfair” such as to violate the remaining defendants’

right to due process.

                                 d




441 (2d Cir. 1987) (“Appellant next asserts that during the
contempt hearing the government presented the district court with
a sealed ex parte affidavit, and adjourned to the robing room to
discuss it outside the presence of . . . counsel, . . . [and] that
this submission . . . denied him his right to a fair hearing. . .
. [T]he procedures followed by the district court in adjudicating
appellant in civil contempt did not deprive him either of due
process of the law or of a fair hearing.”); Fitzgerald v. Kingston,
1998 WL 372763, *5 (D. Mass. 1998) (“[The defendant] alleges that
the . . . the ex parte receipt of the additional . . . information
. . . violated his procedural due process . . . rights. . . .
[W]hile the ex parte receipt of additional information on the
subject of the suspension was culpable (even the Town’s counsel
conceded at oral argument that the omission was not good practice),
it did not rise to a constitutional level.      Full judicial-type
hearings are not required when local boards engage in granting or
revoking permits, [even] in cases, such as this, of the revocation
of a professional or occupational license.”) (quotations and
citations omitted) (emphasis added).




                                 40
     Having concluded that the remaining defendants’ due process

rights   were   not   themselves   violated   by   the   district   court’s

procedures, the only potential question remaining is whether the

violation of CNA and Tone’s rights somehow “tainted” the proceeding,

such that the remaining defendants are also entitled to a reversal

of their sanctions.     It has been argued in this regard that our due

process ruling must be made on the proceeding as a whole, and not

as to individual defendants.

     In LeGrand, we were confronted with the far more serious

question of a single defendant who was subjected to both criminal

and civil contempt sanctions.      We stated:

     The contempt order in this case involves a true mixture
     of both criminal and civil relief.       Accordingly, it
     should be characterized as criminal for purposes of
     appeal.   This characterization permits the review of
     civil contempt orders which would otherwise not be final
     and appealable. However, it does not necessarily follow
     that, even if this is a true “mixed relief” case, a Court
     must vacate and remand the whole proceeding for failure
     to comply with criminal procedure. In Lamar[ Financial
     Corp. v. Adams, 918 F.2d 564, 567 (5th Cir. 1990)], the
     reviewing court vacated and remanded the criminal portion
     of the order but affirmed the civil portion after finding
     the district court had not abused its discretion in
     granting the civil relief.


LeGrand, 43 F.3d at 169-70.    In the light of this precedent, we are

confident that we have followed the correct path by making an

individual evaluation of each defendant’s right to due process, and

conclude that our analysis of CNA and Tone’s procedural claims is




                                    41
irrelevant to the outcome for the other defendants.26                   Because we

have found the procedure individually sufficient as to defendants

Burns, Bieck, Wright, Fiedler, Burnthorn, and Berry, we therefore

decline to reverse their sanctions for want of due process, and

proceed to their other arguments.

                                           B

      Turning, at very long last, to the substance of this case, the

sanctions defendants next argue that the district court clearly

erred in making its required finding of bad faith conduct.                     With

regard to sanctions defendants Burns, Bieck, Wright,                     Fiedler,

Burnthorn, and Berry, we must obviously consider this argument, as

we   have        found   no   procedural   basis   for   a   reversal    of   those

defendants’ sanctions.           We also consider this merits question as to

defendants CNA and Tone, however, because it allows us to determine

whether the proceeding can be dismissed as to them, thereby avoiding

the potentially vexatious double jeopardy concerns that would be

raised by a remand in the light of the criminal nature of their

sanctions.

                                           1



            26
         Obviously, in any sanctions proceeding involving both
criminal and civil (or, as here, quasi-criminal) defendants, the
proper procedure is to provide full criminal safeguards throughout.
We merely note that a lack of proper criminal procedure in a mixed
proceeding does not constitute reversible error as to the civil
defendants. As to those defendants, there is simply no entitlement
to heightened procedure, and therefore no prejudice in its
deprivation.




                                           42
      As noted above, “the threshold for the use of inherent power

sanctions is high.”        Elliot, 64 F.3d at 217.     “In order to impose

sanctions against [a defendant] under its inherent power, a court

must make a specific finding that the [defendant] acted in ‘bad

faith.’”   Chaves v. M/V Medina Star, 47 F.3d 153, 156 (5th Cir.

1995). Where the sanction is disbarment, we have required that this

finding be based on “clear-and-convincing” evidence.               See In re

Medrano, 956 F.2d 101, 102 (5th Cir. 1992).            We have also noted

that, where the finding of bad faith is based on “an erroneous view

of the law or on a clearly erroneous assessment of the evidence,”

the   imposition    of   sanctions   is    “‘necessarily   [an]   abuse   [of]

discretion.’”      Dawson, 68 F.3d at 896 (quoting Cooter & Gell v.

Hartmarx Corp., 496 U.S. 384, 405 (1990)).

      In this case, we note at the outset that the district court did

make a facially sufficient finding when it ruled that all of the

sanctions defendants had engaged in a conspiracy to willfully

defraud the Crowes by concealing the D&O Policy from them. The sole

question for this court is whether that finding was based on “an

erroneous view of the law or on a clearly erroneous assessment of

the evidence.”

      As indicated in Dawson, when sanctions are imposed under the

inherent   power,    our    investigation     of   legal   and    evidentiary

sufficiency is particularly probing.            The hand of the district

court, as we are reminded by the Supreme Court, is sometimes wont

to be imperial, and when the district court dips into its reservoir




                                      43
of inherent power, the attorneys practicing at its bar are likely

to be in their most vulnerable setting.              Because direct democratic

controls are not available to guard against the inherent power of

individual judges, we must, on appeal, assure that this power is

exercised in the most careful manner. This means that we will probe

the record in detail to get at the underlying facts and ensure the

legal sufficiency of their support for the district court’s more

generalized finding of “bad faith.”

                                          2

     The basis for the district court’s finding of bad faith in this

case was an attempt to defraud.           There were two distinct classes of

conduct cited by the court in support of this theory.                    First, and

primarily, the district court found that all of the sanctions

defendants willfully failed to disclose the D&O Policy to the Crowes

despite having a known duty to reveal it.                  Second, the district

court   found   that   some    of   the       attorney    defendants    engaged     in

affirmative misrepresentations or near misrepresentations in an

attempt to keep the policy a secret.                 Clearly, either of these

grounds would be sufficient to support a finding of bad faith

conduct.    The question is whether the record is sufficient to

support them.

     With   respect    to     the   first      asserted    ground,     there   is   no

particular dispute that the sanctions defendants failed to disclose

the D&O Policy.    Less clear, however, is the extent to which this

omission constituted a willful breach of some known duty to act.




                                          44
In its opinion, the district court theorized two principal duties:

First, a general duty to reveal applicable insurance policies prior

to settlement;27 second, a more specific duty to respond accurately

to discovery requests.28    At oral argument, however, Ward conceded

that the sanctions in this case could only be premised on the duty

to respond accurately to discovery requests, either as directly

implicated or under a theory of aiding and abetting.29            For this

          27
        Based on the somewhat trailblazing case of Spaulding v.
Zimmerman, 116 N.W.2d 704 (Minn. 1962), and its dubious progeny.
In Spaulding, the court held that a defendant had a duty to reveal
his greater knowledge of the extent of a plaintiff’s injuries in
the context of a settlement requiring court approval. Id. at 709.
          28
        A duty that should need no further clarification.      Rule
3.3(a)(2) of the Louisiana Rules of Professional Conduct expressly
provides that “[a] lawyer shall not knowingly . . . fail to
disclose that which he is required by law to reveal,” and we have
expressly held that inherent power sanctions are an appropriate
response to discovery violations. See Carroll, 110 F.3d at 293
(noting that “intentional disruption of the discovery process [is]
misconduct that is recognized in the rules, in common sense, and in
respect for the court’s processes”)
     29
          The Court:   The problem, to me, is, uh . . . like in
                       negotiations, just as a general proposition,
                       no lawyer is obligated to tell everything that
                       he has before he puts it on the table.

          Mr. Ward:    Absolutely.    That’s right.

          The Court:   So, I mean, here, uh . . . let’s just assume
                       that there was no proper interrogatory, or no
                       proper request for production, it seems to me
                       there would have been no obligation for the
                       lawyers to reveal the existence of the CNA
                       policy. Do you agree with that?

          Mr. Ward:    I agree with you 100 percent, Judge. That’s
                       true. I think there would be an argument--

          The Court:   So   then   only   if   each   of   these defendants




                                     45
reason, we will constrain our analysis of the failure-to-disclose

prong to this theory of duty.30    Under this theory, the question

becomes whether the record supports a finding that the sanctions

defendants either knowingly made a false response to a discovery

request, or knowingly assisted someone else in making or concealing

a false response.    After a thorough review of the record, we have

determined that it is completely insufficient on this point as to

all of the sanctions defendants except Berry.




                      violated some . . . some discovery rule, would
                      they be subject to the sanctions of the court.

         Mr. Ward:    I think the discovery devices gave rise to the
                      initial duty.   But this is the problem you
                      have, is when you move over to settlement,
                      these gentlemen and their clients become aware
                      that certain parties had a duty to disclose
                      something. And we get into the problem of an
                      in glo . . . an in globo settlement. All the
                      defendants know, the record’s very . . . very
                      clear; every defendant knows that I have asked
                      questions in discovery that give rise to
                      duties to disclose. So, what . . . what duty
                      do   you   have  when   you   know   someone’s
                      perpetrating a fraud, and you assist, or
                      you’re going to achieve a benefit from it?
    30
      As a general matter, we will not consider arguments that have
not been urged by the parties on appeal. United States ex rel.
Thompson v. Columbia/HCA Healthcare Corp., 125 F.3d 899, 903 n.3
(5th Cir. 1998). We note in passing, however, that, were we not so
constrained, we, like Ward, would nonetheless find it difficult to
identify any non-discovery-related duty that required the sanctions
defendants to reveal all applicable insurance policies to opposing
counsel in this case. Spaulding was an unusual case with a narrow
range of factual applicability, and its rather extreme (when more
broadly applied) rule finds no support in the jurisprudence of this
circuit.




                                  46
     With        respect   to   the   second   asserted   ground,   affirmative

misrepresentations, the dispute is less complex.             Rules 4.1(a) and

8.4(c) of the Louisiana Rules31 are quite clear in their mandate

that attorneys not lie in the course of representation.                    The

question simply becomes whether the record supports a finding that

any of the attorney defendants actually lied with respect to the D&O

Policy.    After a thorough review of the record, we have determined

that it is also at least partially insufficient on this point as to

all of the sanctions defendants except Berry.

                                          a

     With respect to CNA, Tone, Fiedler, and Burnthorn, there was

no finding or evidence32 of any incorrect answer to any discovery

            31
          And parallel provisions of every other professional
responsibility code, for that matter. See, for example, Rules 4.1
and 8.4 of the ABA’s Model Rules of Professional Responsibility.
      32
        With respect to Burnthorn, we should note that there was
initially some evidence of discovery abuse. In making her client
Dollar’s claim of privilege in response to Request 5, Burnthorn
identified the privileged material (as required by Fed. R. Civ. P.
26(b)(5)) as notifications of claim sent to New England Insurance
Company and Home Insurance Company only. Yet barely a week before,
Burnthorn had herself drafted a notification of claim to be sent to
CNA as well. The failure to identify this notice would appear to
be an error so conspicuous that a reasonable trier of fact may have
been justified in concluding that Burnthorn (and, through her,
Wright) had made a willful omission.
     As noted, however, the district court made no such finding,
even though it was clearly aware of the nature of the response.
Indeed, the district court expressly disclaimed any reliance on
alleged discovery violations as a basis for finding bad faith
conduct on the part of Wright and Burnthorn, and in assessing
sanctions against them, the court relied exclusively on a breach of
the now abandoned Spaulding duty. In the light of this treatment,
we conclude that the cited evidence was essentially discredited,
and we therefore decline to consider it for purposes of this




                                         47
request at all, much less a willfully false response.            Furthermore,

there was no finding or evidence that any of these defendants

willfully aided anyone else in making or concealing an incorrect

response, or even that they knew that anyone had made an incorrect

response.      Finally, there was no finding or evidence that Tone,

Fiedler,       or   Burnthorn   ever        engaged   in   any   affirmative

misrepresentations with respect to the D&O Policy. As to CNA, Tone,

Fiedler, and Burnthorn, the district court’s finding of bad faith

conduct was therefore clearly in error and its imposition of

sanctions an abuse of discretion.

                                       b

     With respect to Burns, Bieck, and Wright, there was also no

finding or clearly convincing evidence of any incorrect response33

to a discovery request, or of any knowing assistance34 of an

incorrect response.35      There was, however, an implicit finding of



appeal.
          33
       With regard to Wright, see the discussion of Burnthorn’s
discovery responses in the preceding note.
     34
      The closest that these defendants came to willful aiding and
abetting was the meeting on July 26. At that meeting, it became
clear that all three were concerned about the possibility that
Berry’s discovery responses were inaccurate. Although the evidence
was clear that none of these defendants exercised an appropriate
amount of care in investigating this possibility, neither did they
knowingly assist Berry in perpetrating a fraud.
     35
      There was a finding of bad faith failure to disclose under
the now abandoned Spaulding theory of duty. As the Spaulding duty
is no longer a viable one for purposes of this case, we disregard
this finding.




                                       48
misrepresentation.        The district court held that Burns made a

willfully misleading statement at the July 11 meeting when he

declared a settlement proposal of $6.2 million to be far beyond any

theory of insurance coverage.         Furthermore, the court held that

Bieck and Wright maintained a knowing silence during this statement.

      The record supports the district court’s characterization of

events, and we are unable to say that the court was clearly in error

in declaring the facts of the July 11 meeting, even under the

heightened clear-and-convincing evidentiary standard applicable to

the sanction of disbarment.       Whether the actions of Burns, Bieck,

and   Wright   constituted     misrepresentation   for    purposes    of   the

Louisiana Rules is a better question, but one which we need not

reach at this juncture.

      For regardless of this “misrepresentation,” the district court

purported to base its finding of bad faith conduct exclusively on

a breach of the duty to reveal the D&O Policy.                 As we just

clarified, however, there was no proper foundation for a finding

that these defendants breached a known duty to disclose, as the

district court made no finding that these defendants ever made or

assisted a false discovery response.        As to these three defendants

as well, the district court’s finding of bad faith conduct was

therefore clearly in error.

                                      c

      Berry    presents    a   different   case.    The    district    court

specifically found that he knowingly and deliberately made blatantly




                                     49
incorrect discovery responses to Requests 5 and 8.          Berry does not

seriously dispute that his responses were in fact false, and, with

respect to at least one of them,36 the record clearly supports the

district court’s inference that he knew his answer to be incorrect

at the time it was offered.         Furthermore, the district court also

found that Berry attempted to cover up his lapse with outright

deception when he repeatedly assured the Crowes’ counsel that his

clients would be paying for any settlement out of their own pockets.

This finding, too, has adequate support in the record. In the light

of these specific findings, we cannot say that the district court

clearly erred in concluding that Berry engaged in bad faith conduct,

or that the evidence was not sufficient to overcome the clear-and-

convincing hurdle.

       We are not swayed from this view by the fact that there may

have been other explanations for Berry’s actions. Berry argues, for

instance, that he did not disclose the D&O Policy or the past claims

correspondence because he simply did not realize that there was a

possibility that the policy would actually cover his clients.             He

essentially pleads incompetence in this respect, stemming from his

lack   of     experience   with   insurance   law.   This   explanation   is

supported in some respects by the district court’s finding that

Berry once actually mentioned the D&O Policy to the Crowes’ counsel,

referring to it as “lapsed.”        It is soundly contradicted, however,


       36
            The response sent on behalf of his fourth director client.




                                       50
by the fact that Berry sought defense and indemnification for his

clients under the policy simultaneous with his purported conclusion

that it did not cover them.

     Even if we were content to characterize Berry as a mere bungler

in a de novo review, we would not have that authority in this case.

Even under the more than perfunctory review applicable to inherent

power sanctions proceedings, the factual findings of the district

court are entitled to respect unless clearly erroneous.      Berry’s

purported interpretation of his discovery duties was neither proper

nor even rationally consistent.    It was not for him to decide, sub

silencio, which documents facially covered by a discovery request

would be important, and we are certain that no competent attorney

would make this presumption.      The district court found Berry’s

explanation to be inherently incredible, and we cannot say that this

finding was clearly wrong.    We therefore conclude that the district

court did not clearly err in finding bad faith conduct on the part

of James W. Berry.

                                   d

     Because the district court clearly erred in making its required

finding of bad faith conduct on the part of defendants Fiedler and

Burnthorn, we must reverse and vacate the imposition of sanctions

against those defendants.     Furthermore, because the record before

us indicates no possible evidentiary basis for a proper finding of

bad faith conduct on the part of either those defendants or CNA and

Tone, we will dismiss the sanctions proceeding as to them.   Because




                                  51
we find no clear error with regard to the finding of bad faith

conduct on the part of Berry, we will not disturb his sanctions for

lack of evidentiary sufficiency.

     Burns, Bieck, and Wright present a more intriguing question.

As it stands, the district court’s finding of bad faith conduct on

their part was clearly in error because its assigned basis finds no

specific support in the record.    As noted above, the district court

found that Burns, Bieck, and Wright acted in bad faith because they

breached a duty to disclose the D&O Policy.   Yet the record reveals

that there was no breach of the only relevant duty. The record also

indicates, however, that there was a supportable finding of other

conduct that would constitute bad faith, in the form of the

misrepresentation offered at the July 11 meeting.       Because this

purported misrepresentation, which we do not take lightly, could be

a sufficient independent basis for the imposition of sanctions,37 we

must ask whether it would be proper for this court simply to affirm

the sanctions imposed against these defendants under this alternate

theory.    Because the district court’s discretionary decision to

sanction these defendants was irreparably intertwined with the

      37
       We also note, in this regard, the rather fine distinction
between   the   evidence    of   Burns,   Bieck,    and   Wright’s
“misrepresentation,” which we consider, and the evidence of Wright
and Burnthorn’s discovery abuse, which we do not. As discussed
above, the district court expressly disclaimed any reliance on
Burnthorn’s discovery responses as a basis for sanctions, which we
read as a rejection of the evidence on that point.             The
misrepresentation evidence, on the other hand, was never rejected
by the district court, and impresses us as having figured
prominently in the background of its decision.




                                   52
breach-of-duty theory of fraud,38 we have concluded that we may not

simply affirm it based on another arguably sufficient theory.

     The imposition of sanctions under the inherent power is a

decision particularly committed to the sound discretion of the

district court.    The inherent power was expressly derived from that

“‘control necessarily vested in courts to manage their own affairs

so as to achieve the orderly and expeditious disposition of cases.’”

Chambers, 501 U.S. at 43 (quoting Link v. Wabash R.R. Co., 370 U.S.

626, 630-631 (1962)). When a district court imposes sanctions under

the inherent power, it is because the court has determined, in its

discretion,     that   the   particular    sanctions   are   necessary   to

effectuate these important goals as to the particular defendants

under its particular theory of the case.         For this court to affirm

inherent power sanctions on grounds other than those expressly

chosen by the imposing court would constitute an encroachment upon

that court’s discretion unwarranted by the concerns for order and

necessity inherent in their use.          The district court in this case

imposed sanctions for breach of a duty to disclose, and we have now

clarified that this basis is insufficient as to these defendants,

although another basis, misrepresentation, might be.              In this

situation, we believe the better course is to reverse and vacate the

district court’s original imposition of sanctions, and, in the




     38
          And the now abandoned Spaulding theory of duty.




                                    53
absence of any other error, remand for reconsideration in the light

of our clarification.39




     39
      We may also dispense, at this juncture, with the additional
miscellaneous arguments of Burns, Bieck, Wright, and Berry. First,
all of these remaining defendants make several unclear and
undeveloped arguments regarding improper bias in the district
court. They can point us towards no motive for or evidence of
expressed partiality, however, and we can see no indication that
the district court was either more or less biased than is natural
and unavoidable where inherent power sanctions are involved. The
mere fact that the court sees fit to bring a sanctions motion will
not give rise to an inference of improper bias. See Lemaster v.
United States, 891 F.2d 115, 120-21 (6th Cir. 1989).
     Second, Berry argues that his sanction was unnecessarily
severe. We think it clear, however, that the particular amount of
an inherent power sanction is uniquely committed to the sound
discretion of the imposing court. In this case, we are content
that the district court adequately considered all of the relevant
circumstances,   and   that  Berry’s   sanction   was   appropriate
thereunder.    Lest there be any doubt on this point, those
circumstances, again, were a deliberate deception leading to a $5
million potential loss. We cannot say that a nine-month suspension
from practice was not the least severe sanction necessary to deter
such conduct in the future. See Natural Gas Pipeline Co. of Am. v.
Energy Gathering, Inc., 86 F.3d 464, 467 (5th Cir. 1996) (noting
that the “sanction chosen must employ ‘the least possible power
adequate to the end proposed’”) (quoting Anderson v. Dunn, 19 U.S.
(6 Wheat.) 204, 231 (1821)).




                                54
                                  V

     For the foregoing reasons, we hold that the district court

violated CNA and Tone’s right to due process by imposing serious

criminal fines on them via a civil process.   We find no procedural

fault as regards the “quasi-criminal” suspension and reprimand

sanctions meted out to the other sanctions defendants.        We also

hold, however, that the district court’s required finding of bad

faith conduct was clearly in error as to all of the sanctions

defendants save Berry. We therefore REVERSE and VACATE the district

court’s imposition of sanctions against all of these defendants.

Furthermore, because the evidence is completely insufficient to

support the sanctions imposed against defendants CNA, Tone, Fiedler,

and Burnthorn, we DISMISS the sanctions proceeding as to them. With

respect to defendants Burns, Bieck, and Wright, we find the record

potentially sufficient to support sanctions, and REMAND to the

district court for further consideration in the light of our

opinion.40   We AFFIRM the sanctions imposed against Berry.

     Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is REVERSED and

RENDERED as to sanctions defendants American Casualty Company of

Reading, Pennsylvania, Michael P. Tone, Anne Fiedler, and Judy L.


      40
      In reaching its decision, the district court should address
specifically the manner in which the actions of Burns, and, more
importantly,   Bieck   and   Wright,   can   be   equated   to   a
misrepresentation for purposes of the Louisiana Rules.      In so
doing, the court should pay particular attention to our command in
Thalheim that such rules are to be read strictly, resolving all
ambiguities in favor of the attorney. See id., 853 F.2d at 388.




                                 55
Burnthorn.   Judgment is REVERSED and REMANDED as to defendants W.

Glenn Burns, Robert B. Bieck, Jr., and William E. Wright.   Judgment

is AFFIRMED as to defendant James W. Berry.41

                           REVERSED in part, AFFIRMED in part, and
                                       REMANDED with instructions.


ENDRECORD




     41
      With regard to Judge Scott’s outstanding motion for leave to
file an amended judgment, we have determined that it has no bearing
on the issues or outcome of this appeal. The motion is therefore
DENIED AS MOOT.




                                56
EMILIO M. GARZA, Circuit Judge, concurring in part and dissenting

in part:

     The    district    court     below   not   only     appointed   plaintiffs’

attorney Ward to prosecute the court’s sanctions motion at the same

time that Ward had his own private sanctions motion pending before

the court (as well as related civil proceedings), but also engaged

in extensive ex parte communications with Ward, ordered Ward not to

disclose the substance of the communications with the defendants,

and allowed Ward to testify as a fact witness and cross-examine

other witnesses during the proceedings.42 Using these unprecedented

procedures and operating under its “inherent powers,” the district

court imposed serious criminal fines and quasi-criminal disbarment,

suspension, and reprimand sanctions on the defendants.

     In    evaluating     these    proceedings,     the    majority   correctly

concludes    that   the   procedures       failed   to    comport    with   basic

principles of due process with respect to the criminal fines imposed

on defendants CNA and Tone.               Ironically, notwithstanding this

conclusion, the majority holds that the same defective procedures

did not violate due process with respect to the quasi-criminal

disbarment, suspension, and reprimand of defendants Burns, Bieck,

Wright, Fiedler, Burnthorn, and Berry.              I respectfully disagree.


    42
          Although the district court ultimately denied the private
sanctions motion one week before issuing its opinion in this case,
Ward’s motion was pending before the court during the court’s
investigation and the entirety of the hearings in which Ward played
such a vital role.




                                      -57-
                                       57
The majority cites no case where inherent powers sanctions have been

imposed or upheld under similar procedures, and I can find none.

Indeed, a thorough review of our case law demonstrates that we have

reversed and vacated disbarment, suspension, and reprimand sanctions

in far less troubling circumstances than those posed by the case at

hand.43    Moreover, the Supreme Court’s decisions in International

Union, United Mine Workers v. Bagwell, 512 U.S. 821, 837-38, 114 S.

Ct. 2552, 2563-64, 129 L. Ed. 2d 642 (1994), and Young v. United

States, 481 U.S. 787, 800, 107 S. Ct. 2124, 2133-34, 95 L. Ed. 2d

      43
          See, e.g., Dailey v. Vought Aircraft Co., 141 F.3d 224,
229 (5th Cir. 1998) (reversing and vacating attorney disbarment
because the district court failed to provide adequate notice and
opportunity to be heard); Scaife v. Associated Air Center Inc., 100
F.3d 406, 412 (5th Cir. 1996) (reversing and vacating attorney
reprimand sanction because it was overbroad and excessive in
relation to the alleged conduct); United States v. Brown, 72 F.3d
25, 29 (5th Cir. 1995) (reversing and dismissing attorney
suspension sanction because disciplinary rule must be strictly
construed resolving ambiguities in favor of the person charged);
Elliott v. Tilton, 64 F.3d 213, 217 (5th Cir. 1995) (reversing and
remanding attorney sanction because the district court failed to
make a finding of bad faith); Chaves v. M/V Medina Star, 47 F.3d
153, 156 (5th Cir. 1995) (reversing attorney sanction because the
magistrate judge failed to exercise the mandated restraint before
assessing sanctions under the inherent power of the court);
Resolution Trust Corp. v. Bright, 6 F.3d 336, 340-41 (5th Cir.
1993) (reversing attorney disbarment because the record did not
support the district court’s bad faith finding); In re Medrano, 956
F.2d 101, 103-05 (5th Cir. 1992) (reversing attorney disbarment
because the district court applied the preponderance of the
evidence rather than clear and convincing evidence standard);
Johnson v. Ayers, 921 F.2d 585, 586 (5th Cir. 1991) (reversing
bankruptcy court’s decision to suspend attorney from practice
because “a reasonable person would have a reasonable basis for
questioning   [the   judge’s]   impartiality    in   the   contempt
proceeding”); In re Thalheim, 853 F.2d 383, 388 (5th Cir. 1988)
(reversing attorney suspension because the district court violated
due process by failing to follow its own requirements concerning
proper disciplinary proceedings).




                                -58-
                                 58
740 (1987), as well as our own warnings in NASCO, Inc. v. Calcasieu

Television & Radio, Inc., 894 F.2d 696, 707-08 (5th Cir. 1990),

aff’d sub nom. Chambers v. NASCO, Inc., 501 U.S. 32, 111 S. Ct.

2132, 115 L. Ed. 2d. 27 (1991), mandate a reversal of the quasi-

criminal sanctions imposed under such defective procedures.

     Accordingly, I dissent from the majority’s affirmance of the

suspension of attorney-defendant Berry.              I concur in the judgment

reversing the disbarment, suspension, and reprimand of Wright,

Burns,   Bieck,    Fiedler,    and    Burnthorn,     as    well       the   majority’s

reversal of the criminal fines imposed on CNA and Tone; I disagree,

however,   with    the    majority’s      approval    of        the    unprecedented

procedures that the district court used to impose the suspension,

disbarment, and reprimand sanctions under its inherent powers.

                                        I

     “A court must, of course, exercise caution in invoking its

inherent powers, and it must comply with the mandates of due

process, both in determining that the requisite bad faith exists and

in assessing fees.”      See NASCO, 501 U.S. at 50, 111 S. Ct. at 2136.

Moreover, “the threshold for the use of inherent power sanctions is

high.” Chaves v. M/V Medina Star, 47 F.3d 153, 156 (5th Cir. 1995).

“Unlike most areas of law, where a legislature defines both the

sanctionable conduct and the penalty to be imposed, civil contempt

proceedings    leave     the   offended     judge    solely       responsible     for

identifying,      prosecuting,       adjudicating,        and     sanctioning     the

contumacious conduct.”         Bagwell, 512 U.S. at 831, 114 S. Ct. at




                                       -59-
                                        59
2259; see also Mackler Productions, Inc. v. Cohen, No. 97-7789, 1998

WL 325233, *2-3 (2d Cir. June 22, 1998) (“A troublesome aspect of

a trial court’s power to impose sanctions . . . pursuant to the

court’s inherent power . . . is that the trial court may act as

accuser,     fact   finder   and   sentencing    judge,     not   subject   to

restrictions of any procedural code and at times not limited by any

rule of law governing the severity of sanctions that may be imposed.

The absence of limitations and procedures can lead to unfairness or

abuse.”) (internal citation omitted). In addition, “[t]o the extent

that such contempts take on a punitive character [] and are not

justified by other considerations central to the contempt power,

criminal procedural protections may be in order.”            Id. at 831, 114

S. Ct. at 2559.

     Significantly, both the Supreme Court and our own court have

emphasized     that   disbarment    is     a   punishment    with    punitive

characteristics.      See, e.g., In re Ruffalo, 390 U.S. 544, 550, 88

S. Ct. 1222, 1226, 20 L.Ed.2d 117 (1968) (“Disbarment, designed to

protect the public, is a punishment or penalty imposed on the

lawyer.”); Dailey v. Vought Aircraft Co., 141 F.3d 224, 229 (5th

Cir. 1998) (“Although disbarment is intended to protect the public,

it is a ‘punishment or penalty imposed on the lawyer.’”) (quoting

In re Ruffalo, 390 U.S. at 550, 88 S. Ct. at 1226).          We have further

concluded that disbarment proceedings are adversarial and quasi-

criminal in nature. See In re Thalheim, 853 F.2d 383, 388 (5th Cir.

1988) (“Attorney disbarment and suspension cases are quasi-criminal




                                    -60-
                                     60
in character.”); In re Medrano, 956 F.2d 101, 102 (5th Cir. 1992)

(“A disbarment proceeding is adversarial and quasi-criminal in

nature and the moving party bears the burden of proving all elements

of a violation.”); see also In re Ruffalo, 390 U.S. at 551, 88 S.

Ct. at 1226 (“These are adversary proceedings of a quasi-criminal

nature.”).    Consequently, while disbarment proceedings are “quasi-

criminal,”    rather    than   purely    criminal,    we   have   consistently

rejected claims that civil procedural protections are adequate to

meet due process requirements.          See, e.g., In re Medrano, 956 F.2d

at   102   (rejecting    the   district     court’s    application    of   the

preponderance of the evidence standard in a disbarment proceeding);

United States v. Brown, 72 F.3d 25, 29 (5th Cir. 1995) (“Because

attorney suspension is a quasi-criminal punishment in character, any

disciplinary rules used to impose this sanction on attorneys must

be strictly construed resolving ambiguities in favor of the person

charged.”).

     Furthermore, we must closely scrutinize the district court’s

use of its inherent powers to insure that the court exercised such

powers with restraint and discretion.          “Indeed, the Supreme Court

has cautioned that ‘[b]ecause of their very potency, inherent powers

must be exercised with restraint and discretion.’” Chaves, 47 F.3d

at 156 (quoting NASCO, 501 U.S. at 44, 111 S. Ct. at 2132); see also

Natural Gas Pipeline Co. v. Energy Gathering, Inc., 2 F.3d 1397,

1406-07 (5th Cir. 1993) (inherent powers must be exercised with

restraint and discretion and only sparingly so).           “Disbarment being




                                    -61-
                                     61
the very serious business that it is, ample opportunity must be

afforded to show cause why an accused practitioner should not be

disbarred.”    Theard v. United States, 354 U.S. 278, 282, 77 S. Ct.

1274, 1276-77, 1 L. Ed. 2d 1342 (1957); see also Ex parte Robinson,

86 U.S. (19 Wall.) 505, 511, 22 L. Ed. 205 (1873) (“Before a

judgment disbarring an attorney is rendered he should have . . .

ample opportunity of explanation and defence.”).         At rock bottom,

“ample opportunity” to present a defense to a charge of disbarment

must include an impartial decision maker and, if one is needed, a

disinterested prosecutor.     See, e.g., Bagwell, 512 U.S. at 831-38,

114 S. Ct. at 2559-64; Young, 481 U.S. at 800-06; NASCO, 894 F.2d

at 707-08.

                                   II

                                    A

     As the Supreme Court explained in Bagwell, “[the] fusion of

legislative, executive, and judicial powers [in inherent powers

proceedings] summons forth . . . the prospect of the most tyrannical

licentiousness” and is “uniquely [] liable to abuse.” Bagwell, 512

at 831-33, 114 S. Ct. at 2559-61.        Accordingly, our jurisprudence

requires     “progressively   greater    procedural   protections”   when

sanctions have punitive characteristics (as they do here) and where

the conduct giving rise to the sanctions occurs outside the presence

of the court and requires elaborate factfinding (as it did here).

See id.    The Supreme Court explained that a district court must be




                                  -62-
                                   62
particularly circumspect in exercising its inherent powers when the

proceedings require elaborate factfinding:

     For a discrete category of indirect contempt, however,
     civil procedural protections may be insufficient.
     Contempts involving out-of-court disobedience to complex
     injunctions   often   require  elaborate   and   reliable
     factfinding. Cf. Green, 356 U.S. at 217 n.33, 78 S. Ct.
     at 660 n.33 (Black, J. dissenting) (citation omitted)
     (“Alleged contempts committed beyond the court’s presence
     where the judge has no personal knowledge of the material
     facts are especially suited for trial by jury. A hearing
     must be held, witnesses must be called, and evidence
     taken in any event. And often . . . crucial facts are in
     close dispute”).    Such contempts do not obstruct the
     court’s ability to adjudicate the proceedings before it,
     and the risk of erroneous deprivation from the lack of a
     neutral factfinder may be substantial.

Bagwell, 512 U.S. at 833-34, 114 S. Ct. at 2560-61 (alteration in

original).

     Here, as the majority’s recitation of the facts demonstrates,

the district court was required to make elaborate and detailed

factual findings after the presentation of conflicting testimony at

the sanctions proceedings (including the testimony of the court’s

attorney Ward).   The conduct giving rise to the sanctions stemmed

from a series of complicated, out-of-court, off-the-record, and much

disputed events that occurred during settlement negotiations.    In

fact, the district court conceded that prior to the sanction

proceedings, “the court knew none of the facts.” The district court

attempted to justify the appointment of plaintiffs’ attorney Ward

by explaining that “the appointment of an attorney was even more

important because the court had absolutely no knowledge of the




                               -63-
                                63
factual basis for any charges for sanctions.”44          Accordingly, under

Bagwell,   these   sanction   proceedings   were   the    precise   type   of

situation where the “risk of erroneous deprivation from the lack of

a neutral factfinder” was substantial.45       See id.      Moreover, as I

discuss below, where the district court appointed a self-interested

prosecutor who continued to represent the private plaintiffs,

communicated ex parte (and secretly) with the court-appointed

prosecutor, and allowed the prosecutor to testify as a fact witness

during the inherent powers proceedings, “the mandated restraint

[was] lacking.”    Chaves, 47 F.3d at 156.

                                    B

     In Young v. United States, under facts decidedly similar to the

case at hand, the Supreme Court explained that “the appointment of

counsel for an interested party to bring the contempt prosecution

. . . at a minimum create[s] opportunities for conflicts to arise,

and create[s] at least the appearance of impropriety.”          Young, 481

U.S. at 806, 107 S. Ct. at 2137.    The Court explicitly rejected the

argument, similar to the one made by the district court and accepted

     44
          As I discuss infra at Part II.B, it is precisely because
the district court had no knowledge of the factual basis for any
sanctions that the extended ex parte communications with Ward, as
well as Ward’s testimony as a factual witness at the proceedings,
violated the strictures of Young, Bagwell, and NASCO.
     45
          Although    the majority concedes that “an initial
impression [of] Bagwell appears to mandate” a reversal of the
district court’s faulty procedures for the disbarment proceedings,
see Op. at 25, the majority nonetheless approves the very
procedures that it concludes violate due process for the criminal
fines.




                                  -64-
                                   64
by the majority, see Op. at 40 n.23, that appointment of opposing

counsel was justified because that person was most familiar with the

underlying events.    The Court explained that:

     The potential for misconduct that is created by the
     appointment of an interested prosecutor is not outweighed
     by the fact that counsel for the beneficiary of the court
     order may often be most familiar with the allegedly
     contumacious conduct. That familiarity may be put to use
     in assisting a disinterested prosecutor in pursuing the
     contempt action, but cannot justify permitting counsel
     for the private party to be in control of the
     prosecution.

Young, 481 U.S. at 806 n.17, 107 S. Ct. at 2137 n.17.                  In

unambiguous terms, the Court condemned the practice of appointing

a self-interested prosecutor in inherent power contempt proceedings:

“If a Justice Department attorney pursued a contempt prosecution for

violation of an injunction benefiting any client of that attorney

involved in the underlying litigation, that attorney would be open

to a charge of committing a felony . . . .            Furthermore, such

conduct would violate the ABA ethical provisions, since the attorney

could not discharge the obligation of undivided loyalty to both

clients where both have a direct interest.” Young, 481 U.S. at 805,

107 S. Ct. at 2136.     The rule and principles set out in Young,

particularly   in   light   of   Ward’s   pending   motion   for   private

sanctions, his extensive ex parte communications with the court, and

his testimony as a fact witness, are directly applicable to the case

at hand.

     The majority attempts to “escape the mandate of Young,” see Op.

at 36, by asserting that our decision in NASCO, where we allowed the




                                   -65-
                                    65
use of opposing counsel to present evidence on the amount of

attorneys’ fees, is “largely dispositive” with regard to Ward’s

service as prosecutor.     See Op. at 32.     I disagree.    First, in

attempting to draw a parallel to the case at hand, the majority

asserts that “the district court in NASCO relied primarily on the

extensive factual development of the monetary sanctions proceeding

in finding Gray disbarrable.”    See Op. at 35 n.19. The record, both

here and in NASCO, completely refutes this assertion.       Indeed, in

Judge Scott’s own opinion in this case, he explicitly states that

in NASCO the court did not have to rely on any factual development

because the court already knew all of the facts before the sanction

proceedings started: “This was a more serious case than NASCO v.

Chambers where the court knew all the facts before trial.”46     Judge

Scott then explicitly distinguished the case at hand from NASCO,

explaining that “[i]n this case the court knew none of the facts.

. . . [and] had absolutely no knowledge of the factual basis for any

charges for sanctions.”

     Our   own   opinion   in   NASCO   illuminates   the   fundamental

distinction between this case, where the sanctionable conduct

occurred out of court and required elaborate factfinding, and NASCO,

where it did not: “Since the misconduct alleged occurred in the

    46
          As the majority notes, Judge Scott was also the presiding
judge in the sanctions proceedings in NASCO; thus, his own
concession that he knew all of the facts before the sanctions
proceedings in NASCO (and that he knew none of them in the case at
hand) is more persuasive than the majority’s assertion to the
contrary.




                                 -66-
                                  66
court, there was no need for elaborate proof of the facts, and the

parties offered none.”      NASCO, 894 F.2d at 707; see also id. at 708

(“There is no dispute that the appellants did everything the

district court said they did.”).             Thus, contrary to the majority’s

conclusion, NASCO cannot be read as support for the district court’s

appointment of an interested opposing counsel who simultaneously

testifies as a fact witness to the much-disputed, out-of-court

conduct of which the judge has no personal knowledge.

      Additionally, in upholding the attorney suspensions in NASCO,

we specifically distinguished Young on the grounds that “the danger

present in Young, that private counsel would be overzealous in the

contempt proceedings in an effort to further the interest of his

client” was not present.        See NASCO, 894 F.2d at 707.            We explained

that “[t]he arguments of counsel at the hearing were devoted

entirely to the issue of monetary sanctions [and] [t]he court relied

on   its   own   research   .   .   .   in     determining   the       propriety    of

nonmonetary sanctions [i.e., suspension and disbarment].”                     NASCO,

894 F.2d at 707-08.         Because the plaintiff’s attorney in NASCO

played such a limited role in the sanction proceedings, we held that

“[t]he court thus avoided placing NASCO’s counsel in the role of

prosecutor for the disbarment proceedings.”              Id. at 708.         Here, we

cannot make the same conclusion.             Indeed, if there is any case to

which the rule in Young applies, it is this one.

      First,     Ward   undoubtedly     had     an   interest     in   the   court’s

sanctions    proceedings     because      he    continued    to    represent       the




                                        -67-
                                         67
plaintiffs in related civil proceedings and had his own private

motion for sanctions pending before the court at the same time. The

majority states that the case here “arguably presents a far less

problematic scenario” than in NASCO because Ward’s private motion

was merely pending during the course of his investigation and

testimony for the court’s sanctions motion.             See Op. at 37 n.21.

I cannot agree that this presents a “far less problematic scenario.”

In NASCO, the opposing counsel’s testimony related only to the

appropriate amount of attorneys’ fees to award; the proceedings did

not involve an interested private party arguing the sanctions motion

for the district court while he had his own private motion, as well

as related civil proceedings, pending before the court.                    The

fundamental problem that the Supreme Court recognized with the

appointment of an interested party to prosecute a serious contempt

is not diminished simply because the interested party has not yet

argued his private motion.         Young prohibits the inherent conflict

of interest, and more importantly, the appearance of impropriety,

that   arises   when   an   interested      private   party   prosecutes   the

contempts.      See Young, 481 U.S. at 807, 107 S. Ct. at 2137

(“Regardless of whether the appointment of private counsel in this

case resulted in any prosecutorial impropriety (an issue on which

we express no opinion), that appointment illustrates the potential

for private interest to influence the discharge of public duty.”).

       Moreover, the district court compounded its error and the

appearance      of   impropriety     by     having    extensive    ex   parte




                                     -68-
                                      68
communications with Ward.     See MODEL CODE   OF   JUDICIAL CONDUCT Canon

3(B)(7) (1990) (“A judge shall not initiate, permit, or consider ex

parte communications, or consider other communications made to the

judge outside the presence of the parties concerning a pending or

impending proceeding . . . .”).   Although the majority states that

the ex-parte contacts in this case were limited “to the most de

minimis and harmless procedural matters,” see Op. at 43, the record

belies this contention.   The district court’s own opinion documents

several of the ex parte communications between Ward and the court:

     Thereafter, we had several long conversations with Mr.
     Ward trying to determine what action should be taken
     addressing this matter and emphasizing the fact that the
     court knew absolutely nothing of the alleged fraud in the
     settlements . . . .

     Naturally we called Ward on several occasions but he knew
     of no facts to support his allegations of fraud.

     We both felt that considering the experience and
     character of the attorneys in this suit, a chance should
     be given to those who were not involved to clear
     themselves without being openly accused and forced to
     defend themselves in court.

See Crowe v. Smith, No. 92-2164, slip. op. at 32-33 (W.D. La. July

25, 1996).

     Moreover, the district court gave Ward explicit instructions

not to disclose the nature of the ex parte communications to the

defendants and denied several motions by the defendants seeking to

be apprised of the nature of these communications.       In light of the

three hats worn by plaintiffs’ attorney Ward (i.e., prosecutor, fact

witness, and private attorney for the opposing party), the district




                                -69-
                                 69
court’s secret ex parte communications with the private prosecutor

create an overwhelming appearance of impropriety.              Cf. Bagwell, 512

U.S.   at    833-34,   114    S.   Ct.    at    2560-61   (setting   forth     the

circumstances under which the risk of erroneous deprivation from the

lack of a neutral factfinder is substantial). The majority attempts

to avoid this conclusion by analyzing the ex parte communications

independently, as if they did not occur in the context of the

inherent powers contempt proceeding where Ward was acting as the

prosecutor as well as testifying before the court. See Op. at 37-38

(“With the exception of the issues of attorney testimony and ex

parte contacts discussed separately below, we can find no serious

deviation from the procedure expressly approved in NASCO . . . .”).

Because inherent powers “must be exercised with restraint and

discretion,” NASCO, 501 U.S. at 44, 111 S. Ct. at 2132, the majority

errs in failing to consider the ex parte communications in the

appropriate context and in conjunction with the other procedural

deficiencies.

       The   majority’s      citation     to    the   “extensive   tradition   of

affording little or no weight to isolated ex parte contacts,” see

Op. at 41-43, n.24 & n.25, provides no support for approving the

extensive and secret ex parte communications in the case at hand.

Significantly, none of the cases cited by the majority involve the

district court’s exercise of its inherent powers. Furthermore, none

of the cases involve ex parte communications with the attorney

acting as a private prosecutor for the court; none of the cases




                                         -70-
                                          70
involve ex parte communications with an attorney who had a private

sanctions motion and civil claims pending before the court; and none

of the cases include ex parte communications with an attorney who

also testified as a major fact-witness in the proceedings.

        Finally, although Ward prosecuted the sanctions on behalf of

the court, he also testified as a fact-witness during the disbarment

proceedings. For obvious reasons, the Rules of Professional Conduct

prohibit attorney testimony under most circumstances.              See LOUISIANA

RULES   OF   PROFESSIONAL CONDUCT Rule 3.7(a) (1995 ed.) (“A lawyer shall not

act as advocate at a trial in which the lawyer is likely to be a

necessary witness . . . .”).           Once again, the majority attempts to

analyze this error independently, instead of in the context of

Young, Bagwell, and NASCO.            The majority cites a “wide swath” of

district        court   and    bankruptcy   court   cases   for   the    general

proposition that the rule barring attorney testimony does not apply

when testimony is “made to a judge, not a jury.”            See Op. at 38-40.

It is significant to note, however, that none of the cases cited by

the     majority     involve    a   testifying   attorney   who   is    also   the

prosecutor appointed by the court.             The same fear that leads us to

bar attorney testimony in jury trials))i.e. that the factfinder (the

jury) would tend to believe the testifying attorney more than an

ordinary witness))applies when the testifying attorney represents

the factfinder (here, the court) rather than (as normal) a private

party.         As the Supreme Court noted in Bagwell, “the risk of

erroneous deprivation from the lack of a neutral factfinder” is




                                        -71-
                                         71
greatest when, like here, the judge has no personal knowledge of the

material facts that are the basis for the sanctions.         See Bagwell,

512 U.S. at 834, 114 S. Ct. at 2560-61; see also id. at 831-32, 114

S. Ct. at 2559 (“Contumacy often strikes at the most vulnerable and

human qualities of a judge’s temperament, and it’s fusion of

legislative, executive, and judicial powers summons forth . . . the

prospect     of    the   most   tyrannical   licentiousness.”)   (internal

quotations and citations omitted) (alterations in original).

                                     III

     After a thorough search of the relevant case law, I have found

no case in which a district court used procedures like the ones here

to impose inherent powers sanctions, let alone where such procedures

were upheld on appeal.           Particularly where the district court

appoints the interested opposing attorney to prosecute the contempt,

engages in secret ex parte communications with the attorney, and

allows the attorney to testify as a fact witness, this court errs

in condoning the district court’s use of its inherent powers.         See

NASCO, 501 U.S. at 44, 111 S. Ct. at 2132 (“Because of their very

potency, inherent powers must be exercised with restraint and

discretion.”).       In light of these unprecedented and unparalleled

procedures, I conclude that the district court failed to provide due

process in imposing the disbarment, suspension, and reprimand

sanctions.        In direct contradiction of our warning in NASCO, the

district court here “plac[ed] [plaintiff’s] counsel in the role of

prosecutor for the disbarment proceedings.” NASCO, 894 F.2d at 708.




                                     -72-
                                      72
Accordingly, I respectfully dissent from the majority’s affirmance

of the suspension of attorney-defendant Berry and its approval of

the proceedings used in this case.




                              -73-
                               73
