Public Trust and Confidence
Restoring Belief in Lawyers
The Public Trust and Confidence in the Justice 
System Initiative will help educate the public about the role of lawyers 
and the justice system.
 
by George C. Brown,
State Bar executive director
 WHEN THE LETTER ARRIVED, I FEARED IT WAS THE TYPE of 
letter that appears angry but really is rather sad, where the writer 
demonstrates that he knows very little about what a lawyer can do under 
the law, or where the writer's expectations are unrealistic. So the 
writer is upset and expects the State Bar to solve the problem.
 WHEN THE LETTER ARRIVED, I FEARED IT WAS THE TYPE of 
letter that appears angry but really is rather sad, where the writer 
demonstrates that he knows very little about what a lawyer can do under 
the law, or where the writer's expectations are unrealistic. So the 
writer is upset and expects the State Bar to solve the problem.
But this one was different. Hand-printed on five-hole-punched lined 
notebook paper, it was written by a man who had been through a Chapter 
13 bankruptcy.
. . .
"My belief in humanity and good fine lawyers has been restored 
because of one fine lawyer and gentleman," he wrote.
"The reason I write to you sir is because never once has our best 
interest ever been less than #1 to him, we are small potatoes with very 
little if any money and he had no reason to have to represent us in our 
chapter 13, he is always having to go to court or deal with our case in 
some manner and never once, never has he asked or even hinted about more 
money, he is always available to us and contacts us right away when he 
knows something. It bothers me terribly that I can't give him something 
even though he has never asked, he's been our comfort in all of this 
turmoil we've been thru.
"People need to know that attorneys like him are out there who do 
really care about people and their rights, and not their next Mercedes 
payment."
. . .
This letter is one of the most heartfelt and heartwarming letters I 
have ever received. You can feel the writer's pain and his obvious 
relief at finding an attorney he knows will help him "keep a roof over 
our daughters heads." And you can see that the client is not a little 
surprised that he is receiving such help.
But we know that the vast majority of Wisconsin attorneys are more 
like the attorney in this letter than not. We know that most Wisconsin 
attorneys work long hours for their clients and wake up nights thinking 
about them. But the public doesn't always see that. In fact, they often 
see the opposite in the media, or, unfortunately, sometimes they 
experience it themselves.
This is why the State Bar joined with the Wisconsin Supreme Court and 
the League of Women Voters to create the Public Trust and Confidence in 
the Justice System initiative in Wisconsin. After a year of extensive 
research, the committee created a report that was presented last fall to 
the Board of Governors and to the supreme court. Since then, various 
efforts to implement the recommendations of the report have begun. And 
President Gerald Mowris has made implementating these action plans a 
cornerstone of his year as president. I urge you to review 
the report.
So thank you, Mr. Lawrence Curka of Milwaukee, for sending me this 
letter. You asked me to somehow recognize the efforts of your lawyer. I 
hope I have done that.
And thank you, Attorney Dayten Hanson of Milwaukee, for being the 
lawyer you are.
Wisconsin 
Lawyer