Tamir Oheb was admitted to the California Bar 14th December 1992, but has since been disbarred. Tamir graduated from Loyola Law School.

Lawyer Information

NameTamir Oheb
First Admitted14 December 1992 (31 years, 6 months ago)
StatusDisbarred
Bar Number161693

Contact

Current Email[email protected]
Phone Number818-326-7610
Fax Number818-832-9995

Schools

Law SchoolLoyola Law School (Los Angeles CA)
Undergraduate SchoolUniversity of California at Los Angeles (CA)

Address

Current Address17411 Tuscan Dr
Granada Hills, CA 91344
Map

History

7 October 2006Disbarred (17 years, 8 months ago)
Disbarment 99-C-11161
1 October 2001Not eligible to practice law in CA (22 years, 8 months ago)
Interim suspension after conviction 99-C-11161
27 August 2001Conviction record transmitted to State Bar Court 99-C-11161 (22 years, 9 months ago)
14 December 1992Admitted to the State Bar of California (31 years, 6 months ago)

Discipline Summaries

October 7, 2006

TAMIR OHEB [#161693], 41, of Grenada Hills was disbarred Oct. 7, 2006, and was ordered to comply with rule 955.

Oheb pleaded no contest to two felonies involving insurance fraud. He completed the terms of his sentence, the felonies were reduced to misdemeanors and eventually the court set aside his guilty plea and his conviction. The State Bar Court concluded that the circumstances surrounding his actions involved moral turpitude although the convictions themselves did not.

Oheb partnered with Kenneth Gottlieb, an attorney who had a criminal record and resigned from the bar with charges pending, to handle personal injury cases. Under their agreement, Gottlieb would find and, when necessary, buy new cases and refer them to Oheb as the attorney of record. The clients were then referred to two particular chiropractors for treatment. Oheb received 25 percent of the attorney’s fees and Gottlieb took 75 percent if he had to buy a case; otherwise, the split was 50-50.

At the time, Oheb was a young lawyer who was financially responsible for his parents. His business had slowed down and he was under severe financial pressure.

Oheb worked with Gottlieb for just over a year. Gottlieb referred 50 to 60 automobile accident injury cases involving 150 plaintiffs to Oheb. According to the bar court’s review department, virtually all the cases were based on fraudulent insurance claims arising from staged accidents.

The hearing judge found credible Oheb’s testimony that he did not know the accidents were fake; Gottlieb and another individual involved in the scheme also testified they did not tell Oheb about the scheme because they feared he would not participate in filing fraudulent claims.

Oheb’s no contest plea involved two fraudulent accidents in which insurers paid out $155,000 to 10 people.

The bar court concluded that Oheb knew that Gottlieb was improperly buying cases and he knew splitting fees with a non-lawyer was improper. He also was reckless in entering a business relationship with Gottlieb without investigating his background. His “manner and method of practicing law . . . during his 14-month association with Gottlieb was reckless and therefore involved moral turpitude,” wrote Judge Ronald Stovitz.

In addition, the court found that Oheb falsely recorded the nature of his payments to Gottlieb in his financial records with the intent to conceal improper fee-splitting, and he repeatedly failed to represent his clients competently. Oheb “engaged in recklessness of the most acute nature,” the court concluded.

October 1, 2001

TAMIR OHEB [#161693], 36, of Tarzana was placed on interim suspension Oct. 1, 2001, following a September 2000 conviction for solicitation or referral of workers’ compensation claims. He was ordered to comply with rule 955.