Disbarred attorney sentenced to time served, plus supervision, after fleecing clients

Disbarred attorney sentenced to time served, plus supervision, after fleecing clients
San Diego County Superior Court trial hearing sentencing
San Diego County Superior Court trial hearing sentencing
The San Diego County Superior Court in downtown San Diego. (File photo by Chris Stone/Times of San Diego)

A disbarred San Diego attorney who pleaded guilty to stealing money from her clients was sentenced Thursday to credit for time already served, plus mandatory supervision.

Kelly DuFord Williams, 38, who ran Slate Law Group in San Diego and was at one time named among San Diego Magazine’s Women of the Year Rising Stars, was arrested two years ago. Authorities accused her of taking funds her clients received in settlements she secured while representing them.

Prosecutors allege that hundreds of thousands of dollars were stolen from as many as eight clients and that Williams forged client signatures on checks she deposited. The amount of restitution to be ordered paid to the victims has not yet been calculated and will be ordered at another hearing later this year.

Williams’ sentence includes credit for time served in county jail, plus three years of mandatory supervision.

Three of her former clients spoke in San Diego Superior Court Thursday afternoon about their fruitless attempts to get their funds from Williams, who they said repeatedly delayed sending them the money. She offered numerous excuses about why the money hadn’t yet been sent.

Victims said they initially took up cases with Williams’ ex-husband, an attorney at what was then called DuFord Law. At some point, Williams’ ex- husband left the firm, which Williams rebranded as Slate Law, and clients were informed that Williams was taking over their cases.

The victims said Williams also agreed to settlements that were far below the amount they were initially promised.

Williams was disbarred about two months after criminal charges were filed.

A declaration in support of an arrest warrant in the criminal case said the State Bar of California had received “numerous complaints regarding Williams” between 2020 and 2023 from both former clients  and Williams’ former employees, including attorneys and paralegals.

The State Bar alleged that in addition to misappropriated funds, Williams made a pair of false police reports “about the welfare of a child because she was upset with someone she was dating” and had a person appear in court as an attorney on behalf of her law firm, despite that person not being licensed to practice law in California.