TBA Law Blog


Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Apr 2, 2026

On April 1, the Tennessee Supreme Court suspended Jeffrey Dennis Johnson from the practice of law for two years, with 30 days to be served on active suspension and the remainder on probation. The court conditioned probation on Johnson’s engagement of a practice monitor, completion of additional continuing legal education hours and payment of incurred litigation costs. Johnson represented a client in a criminal matter after representing the client in a separate criminal matter some years previously. The court found that the new representation was improperly conditioned upon the client making outstanding payments for the prior representation. In a subsequent motion to withdraw from the most recent representation, Johnson also made derogatory and disparaging statements about his client, and revealed confidential information related to the representation of the client without the client’s consent. These actions were found to violate Tennessee Rules of Professional Conduct 1.6, 1.7, 1.9, 1.16, 3.5(e) and 8.4(d).