Mark Edward Halloran is an active member of the California Bar and was admitted 29th November 1978. Mark graduated from UC College of the Law, San Francisco.

Lawyer Information

NameMark Edward Halloran
First Admitted29 November 1978 (45 years, 5 months ago)
StatusActive
Bar Number82284

Contact

Current Email[email protected]
Phone Number310-893-9326
Fax Number310-893-9326

Schools

Law SchoolUC College of the Law, San Francisco (San Francisco CA)
Undergraduate SchoolUniversity of California at Los Angeles (CA)

Address

Current AddressMedia Law Limited, 13863 Burton St
Panorama City, CA 91402-3838
Map
Previous AddressMark Halloran Law Corp.
9420 Wilshire Blvd Fl 2
Beverly Hills, CA 90212
Previous AddressMark Halloran Law Corp., 114 N Almont Dr, Apt 3
Beverly Hills, CA 90211-1818

History

21 February 2015Discipline w/actual suspension; credit for prior ineligibility 10-O-06099 (9 years, 2 months ago)
10 August 2013Active (10 years, 8 months ago)
10 August 2012Not eligible to practice law in CA (11 years, 8 months ago)
Ordered inactive 10-O-06099
28 December 2011Disciplinary charges filed in State Bar Court 11-O-14908 (12 years, 4 months ago)
23 September 2011Disciplinary charges filed in State Bar Court 11-O-11711 (12 years, 7 months ago)
27 July 2011Disciplinary charges filed in State Bar Court 10-O-06099 (12 years, 9 months ago)
29 November 1978Admitted to the State Bar of California (45 years, 5 months ago)

Discipline Summaries

February 21, 2015

MARK EDWARD HALLORAN [#82284], 62, of Beverly Hills, was suspended from the practice of law for one year. He was also placed on three years’ probation and faces a two-year suspension if he does not comply with the terms of his disciplinary probation. The order took effect Feb. 21, 2015. Halloran’s suspension follows his successful completion of the Alternative Discipline Program. Halloran stipulated that he commingled personal funds in his client trust account and used it to cover personal expenses, committed moral turpitude by using his client trust account to shield funds from state and federal tax liens, issued checks from his client trust account when he knew or should have known there were insufficient funds and failed to participate or cooperate in a disciplinary investigation. In mitigation, Halloran took steps that demonstrated his recognition of wrongdoing and remorse, presented evidence of his good character, had no prior record of discipline and was suffering from extreme personal difficulties at the time of his misconduct.