I was good Friends with this guy in high school. I was floored when I found out he became a scumbag. He got out of 'Federal prison" and I found out when I was back for the A&M game and they he had stolen from whoever hired him and is now in Prison in Montgomery. To this day I am shocked.
http://blog.al.com/live/2009/12/full_report_former_attorney_gu.html MOBILE, Ala. --
J. Gullatte Hunter II Former Mobile lawyer J. Gullatte Hunter III has been accused of stealing $90,000 from the estate of a client's husband and spending part of the money on a diamond ring, according to the Mobile County District Attorney's Office.
Hunter, 49, was arrested Thursday and charged with first-degree theft of property, jail records showed.
Geoffrey Alexander, a Mobile County assistant district attorney who specializes in white-collar crimes, said Opal Price hired Hunter to represent her in settling the estate of her deceased husband, Jack Price Sr.
Hunter told Price that $90,000 from the sale of a house would be divided between her and her husband's children from a previous marriage, Alexander said.
Price was slated to receive $40,000, and Hunter's fee would be $5,000, Alexander said.
Instead, Hunter in August 2008 deposited the $90,000 into a personal bank account -- rather than a trust account for legal business -- and immediately withdrew $11,000 in cash, Alexander said.
In the same transaction, Hunter had the bank issue a check for $38,000 to a jewelry store in Auburn as a "partial payment" on a diamond ring, Alexander said.
About $41,000 was left in the account, Alexander said, and the estate has yet to be finalized. The Mobile County District Attorney's office launched an investigation after Price reported the missing money to authorities in September.
Hunter's attorney, Domingo Soto, declined to comment.
Records showed that Hunter was released from the Mobile County Metro Jail on Thursday without having to post bail.
Hunter was disbarred in September after pleading guilty to a drug charge.
In a separate incident, Hunter was charged in September with four counts of second-degree possession of a forged instrument.
Prosecutors said Hunter settled a medical malpractice lawsuit and deposited two bank checks without his client's knowledge or permission last year. That case has not gone to trial.