
    In re: Herbert S. MONCIER, Appellant.
    No. 08-5645.
    United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit.
    July 8, 2009.
    Before: DAUGHTREY, ROGERS, and KETHLEDGE, Circuit Judges.
   PER CURIAM.

Attorney Herbert Moneier appeals his seven-year suspension from the bar of the Eastern District of Tennessee for conduct described, in some detail, in another opinion released today. See United States v. Moncier, No. 07-6053 (6th Cir. July 8, 2009). We have considered Mr. Moncier’s arguments in favor of reversal, and reviewed the substantial record in this case. And having done so, we have little to add to the District Court’s exhaustive, painstaking, and well-reasoned opinion in this case. Mr. Moncier’s conduct, in short, was precisely as Chief Judge Collier described it to be.

We write farther to address only one of Moncier’s arguments on appeal: Namely, that in disciplining Mr. Moncier, Chief Judge Collier improperly relied upon Judge Greer’s factual and legal findings in Mr. Moncier’s criminal-contempt case. It is true that, in the course of his 80-page opinion suspending Mr. Moncier from practice, Chief Judge Collier cited Judge Greer’s factual findings in the contempt case. But any error with respect to those citations was harmless. Mr. Moncier admitted to the conduct that was the basis of his suspension. He admitted, for example, that he interrupted Judge Greer, that he threatened to abandon his client — a criminal defendant — and that he disobeyed a direct order of the court. See April 29, 2008 Memorandum & Order, 550 F.Supp.2d 768 at 801, 802-03, 804. Chief Judge Collier also noted that his findings were based on his own review of the transcript of the hearing in which the misconduct occurred. See id. at 800, 801, 802-03, 804. Moreover, Chief Judge Collier specifically did not rely on Judge’s Greer’s legal finding of contempt. See id. at 782. Hence this argument, like Mr. Moncier’s other ones, does not entitle him to relief.

The District Court’s April 29, 2008 Memorandum and Order is affirmed.  