IS the perpetrator actually "Florencia Daud" or she someone impersonating Florencia? Bailey, the victim of this fraud, happened to say that the perpetrator does not look very similar to the photos of the latter, so I am surmising. I just assume they’re the same person because most online pages about “Daud & Associates” and “Daud Legal” (both firms in Argentina) disappeared the very day on which this fraud gained wide attention.
Is the ‘Colegio de Abogados de Buenos Aires” empowered to govern (regulate + discipline) breaches of its Codes of practice and ethics, or is it only a voluntary association of certified lawyers? Big difference!
Perhaps an Argentine lawyer would kindly confirm this and outline the disciplinary powers of the relebant governing body, and tell us how quickly it typically deals with anyone holding himself out as a licensed and practicing Argentine lawyer who in fact is not such. Also, what sanctions can the governing body levy upon a licensed lawyer who has perpetrated a blatant fraud but who hasn’t yet been convicted of or charged with it? Also, is it actually possible for a person to obtain a qualifying law degree needed to obtain professional training or 'articles', and be admitted to Argentine Bar all in the same year? (According to Ms/Mrs. Daud’s bio she obtained a law degree and became licensed in the same year.)
I’m having difficulty with the implication in Florencia’s bio that she worked for the the British Parliament as a non-British national. Similarly, that she was employed by the EU (Brussels + Luxembourg) as a non-European citizen. Does Florencia have British or another EU citizenship in addition to her assumedly Argentine one?
Has Florencia ever been admitted to and is she currently a member of the “The Law Society of England and Wales”? An earlier contributor said she was listed as a member on the “LinkdIn” website before the entry for this disappeared today.
Florencia as already noted on this thread by a contributor to this thread would not have been permitted to provide legal advice in New York as she stated online in her bio unless the NY Bar had an arrangement with another Bar to which Florencia belonged which agreement allowed her to practise law in New York. Is she a member of any U.S. Bar?
Is there any connection between “Daud & Associates” Legal Services on Pueyrredon in BA and “Daud & Associates” in Panama? (The latter is a large firm stated to be headed by an “M. Daud” and that emphasizes its international business expertise, particularly its maritime practice. I ask this primarily because Florencia’s bio says she has practiced law in many countries.
Is Florencia Daud married or not? (Imagine if you suddenly learned your spouse was in trouble for serious fraud and you’d not been part of it or known of it!) In her bio posted on this thread today, she refers to herself as “Mrs” Daud. In other places online with basically the same bio, she either uses no title or refers to herself as “Ms” Daud or “Director” of “Daud Legal”.
The perpetrator of this fraud could well lose more than just her apartment and her social reputation if she is a lawyer, or if she offered legal services in a place she’s not licensed to practise, or if she has a impersonated a licensed lawyer.
I find the following odd:
-that someone who was educated in law in Argentina to the academic standard required towards obtaining membership in the Argentine Bar; who belongs to that Bar only; and who practises law only in Argentina does not promote his/her ‘international law’ and ‘trade’ services in Argentina to potential Argentine clients nor to Spanish-speaking Latin American clients in Spanish. (It’s confusing more so because Florencia states that she practises law in different countries. But even ignoring that, why would a lawyer intentionally forfeit a large section of his possible client base?);
-that 3 legal associates + Florencia at the Pueyrredon address offer(ed?) services in so many (20-30?) legal fields;
-that a law office would share its ‘phone number with a cooking school and the “Recoleta Spanish School”, all at the same address;
-that someone who had worked for a high-profile law firm in BA would not name it in her bio/resume when such a firm would be well-known and so advance her legitimate career goals;
-that Florencia doesn’t state the job titles of her ‘work’ positions with the British Parliament and the EU; and
-that she published on the “Daud Legal” website and elsewhere that she pursued a graduate degree at LSE and attended numerous courses in law in Europe but not that she completed these and received recognition for so doing.