Thaddeus Julian Culpepper was first admitted to the California Bar 16th June 2002, but is now no longer eligible to practice. Thaddeus graduated from UC Davis SOL King Hall.

Lawyer Information

NameThaddeus Julian Culpepper
First Admitted16 June 2002 (22 years, 10 months ago)
StatusNot Eligible to Practice
Bar Number220194

Contact

Current Email[email protected]
Previous Email[email protected]
Phone Number702-371-5254

Schools

Law SchoolUC Davis SOL King Hall (Davis CA)
Undergraduate SchoolUniversity of Pittsburgh (Pittsburgh PA)

Address

Current Address3822 Agave Ct
Perris, CA 92570-7192
Map
Previous Address3818 Crenshaw Blvd Ste 905
Los Angeles, CA 90008
Previous Address16400 Ventura Blvd
Ste 305
Encino, CA 91436-2175
Previous Address3938 W 28th St
Los Angeles, CA 90018-2352

History

10 April 2023Not eligible to practice law in CA (2 years ago)
Interim suspension after conviction 23-C-30217
22 February 2023Conviction record transmitted to State Bar Court 23-C-30217 (2 years, 2 months ago)
30 January 2023Not eligible to practice law in CA (2 years, 3 months ago)
Interim suspension after conviction 22-C-31038
8 December 2022Conviction record transmitted to State Bar Court 22-C-31038 (2 years, 4 months ago)
3 October 2022Active (2 years, 7 months ago)
2 July 2019Not eligible to practice law in CA (5 years, 10 months ago)
Suspended, failed to pay fees
2 July 2019Not eligible to practice law in CA (5 years, 10 months ago)
Admin Inactive/MCLE noncompliance
23 January 2015Active (10 years, 3 months ago)
22 January 2015Not eligible to practice law in CA (10 years, 3 months ago)
Suspended, failed to pass Prof.Resp.Exam 11-O-17682
2 December 2013Active (11 years, 5 months ago)
26 October 2013Not eligible to practice law in CA (11 years, 6 months ago)
Discipline w/actual suspension 11-O-17682
9 October 2012Disciplinary charges filed in State Bar Court 11-O-17682 (12 years, 6 months ago)
25 November 2010Discipline, probation; no actual susp. 06-O-13980 (14 years, 5 months ago)
16 June 2002Admitted to the State Bar of California (22 years, 10 months ago)

Discipline Summaries

November 25, 2010

THADDEUS JULIAN CULPEPPER [#220194], 37, of Pasadena was suspended for two years, stayed, placed on three years of probation and was ordered to take the MPRE within one year. The order took effect Nov. 25, 2010.

Culpepper stipulated to five counts of misconduct in three matters.

In the first, he was hired to represent a client in a dispute with his ex-wife’s sister and brother over her estate. His client lost, left on a trip and gave Culpepper a key to a storage location that purportedly contained documents at issue. When the opposing side served Culpepper with various requests, he asked his client to provide the information, but the client did not do so. Culpepper and the opposing counsel went to the storage area but found nothing.

Culpepper subsequently did not appear at a hearing to compel responses to discovery requests. He did not appear at three hearings and was sanctioned twice. He stipulated that he violated a court order.

Culpepper also was sanctioned $1,000 by the Court of Appeal for not arranging payment of docketing and filing fees. In its order, the court notified Culpepper’s client that he had failed to prosecute the case and advised him to hire a new lawyer. Culpepper stipulated that he did not report the sanction to the bar.

In an estate matter, the court ordered Culpepper to correct technical defects in a declaration he filed, and he continued to act as counsel for two estates without properly documenting his representation of those estates. As the case progressed, Culpepper was given two cashier’s checks totaling $163,074.62, although he was not authorized to received settlement funds for his clients. He deposited the money into another lawyer’s trust account, despite not having the authority to do so. After he withdrew almost $20,000 from the estate funds for legal fees and for two clients, the bank froze the remaining estate funds.

He stipulated that he failed to perform legal services competently, keep clients reasonably informed about developments in their cases and he collected an illegal fee.

In mitigation, Culpepper had severe financial problems, acted in good faith and took remedial steps by voluntarily placing himself under court jurisdiction for a restitution plan.