Former Bridgecorp chairman Bruce Davidson has been suspended from practicing as a lawyer for nine months from today.
Davidson, now in his mid-70s, pleaded guilty to 10 Securities Act charges for misstatements in Bridgecorp's offer documents and was sentenced in 2011 to nine months' home detention, 200 hours' community work and paid $500,000 in reparations.
Following a hearing last year, the New Zealand Lawyers and Conveyancers Disciplinary Tribunal found Davidson's conviction had tended to bring the legal profession into disrepute and censured him. The decision was, however, split and a minority of the tribunal disagreed the allegation brought before it had been proven.
Davidson, a former president of the Auckland District Law Society and past vice-president of the New Zealand Law Society, took issue with the majority's decision and appealed it in the High Court in August.
At the same time, a standards committee of the Law Society appealed the decision that Davidson's convictions did not reflect on his fitness to practise as a lawyer.