“Three may keep a secret,” wrote Benjamin Franklin, “if two of them are dead.” While attorney-client privilege confers a lot of power on lawyers and their agents to keep a secret, the privilege is never absolute. It can be waived by the client anytime, and can be breached in all sorts of ways.
Continue Reading Confidentiality in Interviews: What You Can Promise and What You Can’t
investigative ethics
Trial Ethics: A Template Can Save Your Life
By Philip Segal on
Posted in Investigation, Legal Ethics
This blog takes no position on the merits of a motion filed to disqualify Kasowitz from representing plaintiffs in a lawsuit against SAC Capital Advisors and others.
We haven’t even read the motion, but are relying solely on a report from New Jersey state court on it via Bloomberg.
The fact pattern reads like…