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  • Trust Accounting Breakdown: What the Harris Indictment Teaches West Virginia Lawyers

    Introduction: This Is Not an Ethics Story — It’s a Systems Story

    Most trust accounting failures are not sudden.

    They don’t start with fraud.

    They start with:

    • loose processes
    • informal habits
    • small shortcuts

    And then, over time:

    👉 those gaps compound into exposure.

    A recent West Virginia case involving allegations of mishandling client funds offers a clear example of how operational weaknesses can escalate into serious consequences.

    For context, you can review the original reporting here:
    👉 https://www.legalnewsline.com/west-virginia-record/harris-indicted-on-42-counts-of-mishandling-client-funds/article_0e6f6af2-aab1-42ce-8679-4adaf39ac152.html

    This article is not about the allegations themselves.

    It’s about what lawyers should take away from them.


    The Core Reality: Trust Accounting Is an Operational Discipline

    Every lawyer knows Rule 1.15.

    But knowing the rule is not the same as implementing it.

    Trust accounting requires:

    • structured workflows
    • documented controls
    • consistent reconciliation
    • clear separation of funds

    Without those, compliance becomes dependent on:

    • memory
    • intention
    • “what usually works”

    That’s where risk begins.


    Pattern #1: Large Balances Without Defined Purpose

    In many trust accounting failures, funds remain in trust for extended periods.

    This creates ambiguity:

    • What is this money for?
    • Who does it belong to?
    • Why hasn’t it moved?

    Best practice:

    👉 Every dollar in trust should have:

    • a defined owner
    • a defined purpose
    • a defined timeline

    Anything else is exposure.


    Pattern #2: Movement Between Trust and Operating Accounts

    This is where systems either hold — or fail.

    Funds should only move:

    • when fees are earned
    • when expenses are incurred
    • when distribution is documented

    Breakdowns occur when:

    • transfers happen informally
    • documentation lags behind
    • timing is inconsistent

    👉 This is how small issues become large ones.


    Pattern #3: Multi-Client Exposure

    One of the most dangerous breakdowns occurs when:

    👉 The system stops treating each client separately

    Instead:

    • funds blur together
    • ledgers become unreliable
    • reconciliation becomes difficult

    At that point:

    • errors multiply
    • detection slows
    • risk accelerates

    The Most Important Control: Three-Way Reconciliation

    If there is one habit that prevents disaster, it is this:

    Monthly Three-Way Reconciliation

    You must reconcile:

    1. Bank balance
    2. Check register
    3. Total of client ledgers

    If these do not match:

    👉 You have a problem.

    And the longer it goes unresolved, the harder it becomes to fix.


    Settlement Funds: The Highest-Risk Event in a Law Firm

    Settlement disbursement is where trust accounting is most visible.

    It is also where failures are most likely to be discovered.

    Why?

    Because:

    • clients are watching
    • amounts are large
    • expectations are high

    Proper Workflow

    1. Deposit funds
    2. Confirm clearance
    3. Identify all obligations
    4. Prepare written settlement statement
    5. Disburse

    No shortcuts.


    Common Failure Points

    • disbursing before funds clear
    • incomplete accounting
    • verbal explanations instead of documentation

    👉 These are operational failures, not ethical gray areas.


    The Solo & Small Firm Reality

    In smaller firms, risk is amplified.

    Why?

    Because:

    • fewer controls
    • limited separation of duties
    • heavier reliance on the attorney

    What You Need Instead

    A system:

    • documented workflows
    • monthly reconciliation schedule
    • clear deposit/disbursement rules
    • review checkpoints

    Because without structure:

    👉 trust accounting becomes personality-driven


    The Misconception: “Good Intentions Are Enough”

    They’re not.

    Trust accounting is not about:

    • honesty
    • effort
    • experience

    It is about:

    👉 repeatability and documentation

    Every dollar should be:

    • traceable
    • explainable
    • supported

    Early Warning Signs Inside a Firm

    Before a major issue appears, there are signals:

    • reconciliation is skipped or delayed
    • ledgers don’t match balances
    • funds sit without clear purpose
    • documentation is incomplete

    These are not minor issues.

    They are early-stage failures.


    Final Insight: Audit Yourself Before Someone Else Does

    Most trust accounting disasters:

    • build slowly
    • remain hidden
    • become visible too late

    The solution is simple — but not easy:

    👉 build systems that catch problems early

    Because once trust accounting breaks:

    👉 it is rarely just an accounting problem


    Closing Thought

    If your firm’s trust accounting depends on:

    • memory
    • trust
    • informal processes

    It is already at risk.

    Because in trust accounting:

    👉 control is protection

  • How to Protect a Word Document With a Password

    If you’re working with sensitive information, protecting your document should be your first step.

  • Cloud Storage Security for Lawyers

    Cloud Storage Security for Lawyers

    Cloud storage can be a major upgrade over unmanaged local files, but only if it is used with discipline. The phrase “it’s in the cloud” does not automatically mean secure.

    What goes wrong

    Many cloud risks come from loose sharing permissions, excessive access, unmanaged personal devices, and public or semi-public links that remain active longer than anyone realizes.

    What lawyers should focus on

    • Use least-privilege access: give users only what they need.
    • Review external sharing regularly.
    • Prefer named-user access over anonymous links when possible.
    • Separate personal and business storage.
    • Use 2FA for all storage accounts.

    Cloud storage is not inherently reckless or inherently safe. It becomes safe through governance, permissions discipline, and reliable authentication.

  • From Filing Cabinets to AI: The Future of Document Intelligence for Law Firms

    Most law firms are sitting on a goldmine.

    They just cannot access it.

    The Problem

    Law firms have:

    • Decades of documents
    • Client records
    • Case files
    • Contracts

    But much of it is:

    • Unscanned
    • Unstructured
    • Unsearchable

    In other words:

    The data exists, but it is unusable.

    The Shift to Document Intelligence

    Modern document intelligence transforms this.

    Step 1: Digitization

    • Scan physical files
    • Convert to digital format

    Step 2: OCR (Optical Character Recognition)

    • Make documents searchable

    Step 3: Classification

    • Organize by case, client, and topic

    Step 4: AI Layer

    • Summarize
    • Extract clauses
    • Identify patterns

    Why This Matters for Law Firms

    This is not just about convenience.

    It impacts:

    • eDiscovery readiness
    • Client response time
    • Operational efficiency
    • Risk management

    Firms that can quickly access and analyze documents:

    Win cases faster and serve clients better.

    The Competitive Advantage

    Most firms have not done this yet.

    Which creates an opportunity:

    • Early adopters gain speed
    • Better insights
    • Stronger client trust

    Final Thought

    The future of law is not just about legal knowledge.

    It is about:

    How well you can access, understand, and use your own information.

    Document intelligence is the bridge.