No. What I have been told is he does not work and lives off of a family trust. When I google the family there is info about the trust so that could be true.
Just wanted to stop by this thread and give you some encouragement ~ lawyer to lawyer.
You are doing great so far. Nobody is perfect. It's not like anyone has the schema for this stuff so it's understandable really hard to expect a perfectly executed recovery plan. Just keep trying and don't give up. Remember, you are trying to SAVE your husband from making the biggest mistake of his life, not punish him. This is a non-vindictive noble effort you are undertaking because you have every legitimate reason, justification and excuse just to divorce his cliched {divorce attorney having an affair} butt.
One clue your IM's could look for as an indication he is serious about fulfilling your conditions is whether he starts floating his resume and/or contacting some friends about moving to another law firm. Considering California traffic, if he moved his job closer to home, that would make OW pretty geographically undesirable.
Some other thoughts -
You mentioned the OW is calling him for legal advice about the adoption and her marriage/potential divorce? Could you expose him at his workplace - and mention that maybe he's been giving out free legal advice on their dime {they pay him a salary}? Maybe she is or has been a client and having a sexual relationship with her violates law firm policies and he'd get fired? Maybe you can file an attorney grievance against him? I know that all sounds very extreme and maybe even against your financial interests {gets really scary with him being a family law attorney}, but in the end, he'll get another job and it'll all balance out. If you end up divorced, he'll play the co-parent game and try to be somewhat normal while I suggest you consider or try to adopt/implement a parallel parenting plan if you can in California.
Another thought ---- this potential adoption ~~ any chance you can contact all the potential independent adoption agencies and expose the affair to them and maybe save some poor infant the misfortune of being placed in that home right now - IF it's even true.
Next thought - If OWH's doesn't work and lives off a trust, I wonder how that works in California. I'm guessing if they divorce she might be entitled to a little support and child support but it's pretty likely or certain if he's a stay at home dad, he's likely going to at least get 50-50 custody and his wife isn't going to be able to touch the trust corpus. Unless the OW is herself wealthy or has a super high paying job (which could end up costing HER) or there is a pre-nup ---- it's most likely she's pretty financially stuck. Trolling out your husband in a chat room is pretty convenient for her because he's supposedly a rich attorney that can "save" her, however, the more you fight and drag out any divorce, the more her eventual and likely financial neediness could frustrate your husband AND his complaining about money, sour the OW about exactly how financially secure this move is for her and her kids. Your husband KNOWS how expensive divorce attorneys are so it's not a bad idea to drop to in-laws and sister or whomever will likely repeat it to your WH that you've been spending days with your lawyer strategizing this divorce and paperwork. Lead him to believe you are spending boatloads of family money on this. Of course, you should really keep your spending on your attorney to an absolute minimum right now and just drag this divorce out as long as humanly possible once the initial orders are in place but your WH doesn't have to know that.
Another long shot thought - carefully look over and contemplate upon any communication you receive/received from the OW and consider carefully whether there is anything actionable there that you could file a restraining order upon on behalf of yourself AND your kids. In some states you can get initial standing orders forbidding exposer of the children to paramours and forbidding unrelated overnight guests of the opposite sex. These would be MUTUAL obligations so they'd apply to both of you (not a problem, I presume, but it's less contentios when just inserted as a matter of fact). If not, an ancillary case seeking a restraining order might be possible to prevent the OW from being around your kids and/or you. Another cause of action MIGHT be extortion or blackmail. I've never seen anyone do it but a crafty lawyer might be able to sue an affair partner who threatens to sue you or call the police and exercise the power of the state upon you if you don't cease and desist from exercising your first amendment rights to free speech. I know, extortion usually involves money but if she and your husband get into a war of words where he starts threatening to demand alimony from you if you don't stop exposing, maybe you've got something there. Here's an article I just found that discusses some California cases involving attorney demand letters and blackmail/extortion. Maybe OW's emails stepped over that line already ----
When a Demand Letter becomes Extortion Final thought - I don't mean to alarm you but if your husband had the gumption to block incoming phone numbers on your cell phone what makes you sure he didn't put spyware on it or isn't otherwise monitoring your phone and computer and hacking your emails? As a divorce attorney, he'd know all the tricks and he had the advantage of KNOWING he was cheating before you caught him. A knowledgeable cheater like this might have set up monitoring long before you caught him. Could he have microphones in your house, a tap on your internet connection, a VAR in your car and spyware everywhere? Maybe he's been reading along this thread the whole time and figures he's just accumulating evidence while getting all the contact he really needs ---- basically if he's reading along he's thinking he's still got today and tomorrow to continue the affair because you aren't really done with him yet. You see - he's like an addict and he's not gonna quit until he's truly hit rock bottom. Addicts just bargain for one more day at a time. I'm not saying he is but you should investigate everything carefully. If there are things in your house after he left, they'd need to be plugged in because batteries longterm aren't reliable so search all outlets and figure out what all cords are connected to, especially around your home wi-fi and computer connections inside and outside the home. Change passwords to EVERYTHING, starting with your cloud back up stuff and then once done, change them AGAIN on a safe device like your sister's computer, in case he was getting notices or monitoring the devices the first time. You don't have to take it to some computer or phone experts - often teenagers are the best source of asking because they are adept at figuring out if their parents are monitoring them and how to ascertain that and work around it. He MAY have even cloned your phone??? who knows??? If you figure out you've been compromised here, email the moderators and let them know and they can maybe try to figure something out to keep getting you the help you need.
If you are a Christian or otherwise religious, pray for your husband. Actually, I read you went to your bishop earlier in the thread so you are Christian. Would the Bishop pursue Church Discipline against him and excommunicate him or is it not that kind of church???? Your husband certainly isn't in a leadership role there, because, if so, he should be removed from it immediately. At the very least update the Bishop and request the Bishop share it with his prayer team and get others praying for your husband. Sometimes it takes a community of believers and a whole lot of faith to displace these really nasty demons. See the stories and what Jesus said where even the disciples had difficulty driving out a demon - Matthew 17:14-20; Mark 9:14-29; Luke 9:37-43.