This article will begin with a review of trial publicity rules from the earliest efforts to curb harmful statements of lawyers during trials to the promulgation of Model Rule 3.6 in 1983 by the American Bar Association. It will then examine Gentile, the main Supreme Court case in this area. The article will next consider the 1994 and 2002 amendments to Model Rule 3.6, which were inspired in part by the Court\u27s ruling in Gentile. It will also look specifically at the trial publicity situation in North Carolina, where Durham District Attorney Michael B. Nifong has been charged with violating the relevant state trial publicity rule, as an example of a state rule virtually identical to Model Rule 3.6 in action. Finally, the article will offe...
At present, the rules of professional conduct applied in federal judicial proceedings vary from dist...
This Note considers court-ordered limitations on the extrajudicial speech of trial participants in h...
Publicity by the prosecution and defense in the criminal proceedings against George Zimmerman again ...
This article will begin with a review of trial publicity rules from the earliest efforts to curb har...
The paper explores the history of trial publicity rules in the United States. Part II discusses the ...
Using the Mike Nifong disciplinary case in North Carolina as a focal point, the author examines the ...
In Gentile v. State Bar the Supreme Court voided an attorney disciplinary rule regulating trial publ...
The current ethical rule governing lawyers\u27 interactions with the media applies equally to defens...
In this article, Professor Freedman condemns the provisions of the proposed Model Rules of Professio...
In Gentile v. State Bar of Nevada, the Supreme Court held a Nevada law prohibiting attorneys from ...
As a growing number of attorneys seek and receive more media attention during trials, the days in wh...
This paper explores the effects of pre-trial publicity on criminal case proceedings, and how publici...
The United States Supreme Court considered seventeen cases raising issues related to the role of att...
This article will examine whether the American Bar Association’s (“ABA”) Model Rules of Professional...
The article focuses on American Bar Association (ABA) adopted Model Rule of Professional Conduct 8.4...
At present, the rules of professional conduct applied in federal judicial proceedings vary from dist...
This Note considers court-ordered limitations on the extrajudicial speech of trial participants in h...
Publicity by the prosecution and defense in the criminal proceedings against George Zimmerman again ...
This article will begin with a review of trial publicity rules from the earliest efforts to curb har...
The paper explores the history of trial publicity rules in the United States. Part II discusses the ...
Using the Mike Nifong disciplinary case in North Carolina as a focal point, the author examines the ...
In Gentile v. State Bar the Supreme Court voided an attorney disciplinary rule regulating trial publ...
The current ethical rule governing lawyers\u27 interactions with the media applies equally to defens...
In this article, Professor Freedman condemns the provisions of the proposed Model Rules of Professio...
In Gentile v. State Bar of Nevada, the Supreme Court held a Nevada law prohibiting attorneys from ...
As a growing number of attorneys seek and receive more media attention during trials, the days in wh...
This paper explores the effects of pre-trial publicity on criminal case proceedings, and how publici...
The United States Supreme Court considered seventeen cases raising issues related to the role of att...
This article will examine whether the American Bar Association’s (“ABA”) Model Rules of Professional...
The article focuses on American Bar Association (ABA) adopted Model Rule of Professional Conduct 8.4...
At present, the rules of professional conduct applied in federal judicial proceedings vary from dist...
This Note considers court-ordered limitations on the extrajudicial speech of trial participants in h...
Publicity by the prosecution and defense in the criminal proceedings against George Zimmerman again ...