94 p.The conventional wisdom among practitioners and legal ethics scholars has been that lawyers may ethically negotiate any settlement terms that serve their clients’ interests and are not criminal or fraudulent. (Some recent critics of settlement secrecy have argued that noncooperation settlements violate obstruction of justice statutes or other criminal laws, but the illegality argument is largely unconvincing.) This Article argues that the conventional view has looked at the problem through the wrong lens. In the ethos of the ethics codes, third party and societal interests generally take a backseat to client service, but certain types of conduct deemed especially harmful to the justice system have long been placed off-limits t...
Should a lawyer keep a client’s secrets even when disclosure would exculpate a person wrongly accuse...
This Article analyzes the relevant ethical mandates and the history of postemployment restrictive co...
Professional codes adopted by states and based on the Model Rules of Professional Conduct and the Mo...
Lawyers frequently draft settlements that impede other parties\u27 access to relevant evidence throu...
A rule of ethics like the one proposed in this Note takes a step toward this goal. Part I explores t...
Lawmakers, courts, and legal scholars often express concern with regard to civil settlements because...
Our research suggests that a true norm of ethical negotiation behavior exists within the legal profe...
At the close of the twentieth century, we are witnessing very significant changes in the litigation ...
The article addresses a common question: What should the rules require lawyers to do when they recei...
The common, shared vision of lawyers’ ethics holds that lawyers ought not collaborate with clients i...
Settlement is more likely if parties are free to set its terms, including a promise that these terms...
Even the most hotly contested lawsuits typically end in a confidential settlement forbidding the par...
The Civil Rights Attorneys\u27 Fees Award Act of 1976 authorizes an award of fees to the prevailing ...
When a client admits to her lawyer that she is responsible for a crime that someone else has been ch...
In this article, the authors argue that the use of secrecy agreements and practice restrictions in s...
Should a lawyer keep a client’s secrets even when disclosure would exculpate a person wrongly accuse...
This Article analyzes the relevant ethical mandates and the history of postemployment restrictive co...
Professional codes adopted by states and based on the Model Rules of Professional Conduct and the Mo...
Lawyers frequently draft settlements that impede other parties\u27 access to relevant evidence throu...
A rule of ethics like the one proposed in this Note takes a step toward this goal. Part I explores t...
Lawmakers, courts, and legal scholars often express concern with regard to civil settlements because...
Our research suggests that a true norm of ethical negotiation behavior exists within the legal profe...
At the close of the twentieth century, we are witnessing very significant changes in the litigation ...
The article addresses a common question: What should the rules require lawyers to do when they recei...
The common, shared vision of lawyers’ ethics holds that lawyers ought not collaborate with clients i...
Settlement is more likely if parties are free to set its terms, including a promise that these terms...
Even the most hotly contested lawsuits typically end in a confidential settlement forbidding the par...
The Civil Rights Attorneys\u27 Fees Award Act of 1976 authorizes an award of fees to the prevailing ...
When a client admits to her lawyer that she is responsible for a crime that someone else has been ch...
In this article, the authors argue that the use of secrecy agreements and practice restrictions in s...
Should a lawyer keep a client’s secrets even when disclosure would exculpate a person wrongly accuse...
This Article analyzes the relevant ethical mandates and the history of postemployment restrictive co...
Professional codes adopted by states and based on the Model Rules of Professional Conduct and the Mo...