Is it ever ethical for a lawyer to ask or assist another person to lie on behalf of a client? Despite ethical rules categorically banning both personal and vicarious deceit, prosecutors routinely supervise police officers and informants who use deceit in investigating drug and sex offenses, organized crime, and terrorism. May defense lawyers make use of investigative deceit in criminal investigations? In this Essay, the Author examines this issue, the ethical rules bearing on it, and the recent trend in a number of jurisdictions allowing the use of investigative deceit by the defense. Drawing on his participation in a series of roundtable discussions sponsored by the Criminal Justice Section of the American Bar Association, the Author canva...
Part I of this Article discusses the prosecutor\u27s duty to refrain from conduct that impedes the s...
Three ethical rules are both clear and highly desirable - MR 3.3(a)(1), which forbids a lawyer to ma...
This essay, for a symposium on Citizen Ignorance, Police Deception and the Constitution, relies on m...
Is it ever ethical for a lawyer to ask or assist another person to lie on behalf of a client? Despit...
Prosecutors and police routinely employ misrepresentation and deceit in undercover investigations. I...
Although I doubt that anyone reading this Article has sworn such an oath (or openly advocates the us...
Whether the criminal defense attorney may ethically discredit the truthful witness on cross-examinat...
This Comment discusses the Colorado Supreme Court\u27s suspension of Assistant District Attorney Mar...
This Note examines this dilemma and recent judicial approaches to it. Judges disagree about how guil...
In almost any area of legal counseling and advocacy, the lawyer may be faced with the dilemma of eit...
This Article has been a preliminary effort at identifying those limitations in connection with one s...
Once a prosecutor determines to employ an expert, a number of distinct decisions must be confronted-...
Defensive dishonesty in criminal investigations has increasingly been prosecuted without standards f...
In this article the author provides a primer on the more common forms of cheating employed by trial ...
This Note explores improprieties and conflicts of interest that may arise when a prosecutor’s office...
Part I of this Article discusses the prosecutor\u27s duty to refrain from conduct that impedes the s...
Three ethical rules are both clear and highly desirable - MR 3.3(a)(1), which forbids a lawyer to ma...
This essay, for a symposium on Citizen Ignorance, Police Deception and the Constitution, relies on m...
Is it ever ethical for a lawyer to ask or assist another person to lie on behalf of a client? Despit...
Prosecutors and police routinely employ misrepresentation and deceit in undercover investigations. I...
Although I doubt that anyone reading this Article has sworn such an oath (or openly advocates the us...
Whether the criminal defense attorney may ethically discredit the truthful witness on cross-examinat...
This Comment discusses the Colorado Supreme Court\u27s suspension of Assistant District Attorney Mar...
This Note examines this dilemma and recent judicial approaches to it. Judges disagree about how guil...
In almost any area of legal counseling and advocacy, the lawyer may be faced with the dilemma of eit...
This Article has been a preliminary effort at identifying those limitations in connection with one s...
Once a prosecutor determines to employ an expert, a number of distinct decisions must be confronted-...
Defensive dishonesty in criminal investigations has increasingly been prosecuted without standards f...
In this article the author provides a primer on the more common forms of cheating employed by trial ...
This Note explores improprieties and conflicts of interest that may arise when a prosecutor’s office...
Part I of this Article discusses the prosecutor\u27s duty to refrain from conduct that impedes the s...
Three ethical rules are both clear and highly desirable - MR 3.3(a)(1), which forbids a lawyer to ma...
This essay, for a symposium on Citizen Ignorance, Police Deception and the Constitution, relies on m...