Short version: Lincoln pays you some nominal fee for title to your soon-to-be-foreclosed house, then goes to court and file tons of frivolous paperwork to stall the creditors. Meanwhile, Lincoln is charging you, the original homeowner, rent, or he's living in your house rent-free, or renting it to someone else, and collecting the proceeds, all the while assuring you that he's fighting to keep your home. (While he's actually hoping that a creditor will buy him off with a cash settlement which you'll never see.)
Lincoln had dreams of setting of shop in California for multiple foreclosure "redemptions,", but the law requires a licensed attorney for a larger operation. Since he and Orly had a falling out, that dream is gone, gone, gone.
But he won't go down without a blaze of glory, so we have the tale of sexcapades between he and Orly in the Florida court, which boils down to a "he said/she said" tale told by idiots, on both sides.
Besides the moral question, is there any legal implication with having an affair with a client?
I would imagine not strictly, but the fact that Taitz appears engaged in a quid pro quo agreement with Lincoln as her client and ghost writer that includes sex probably won’t please the California bar. But I have no idea if sexual relationships amongst lawyers and clients is even relavent.
BTW, according to Lincoln his friend the psychologist was copied on all communications between the Lincoln and Orly... Doesn’t this violate confientiality? Unless all the clients gave permission, I guess.