Categories
. Legal ethics

A promised update about that CLEUI/CLEWI situation.

A little while back, I posted about a Virginia lawyer who had been suspended after being drunk and disruptive while attending a CLE.  At the time, I speculated about what the ethics infraction might have been – making a false statement in terms of filling out the paperwork on attendance.  I was in the ballpark, […]

Categories
. Legal ethics

Why blog posts aren’t, and shouldn’t try to be, solicitations of clients.

So this little blogpost from a Michigan bankruptcy attorney that went viral would be a perfect example to use to answer a question I get asked quite frequently:  When do I have to worry about something I post online being treated as a solicitation of a client under the ethics rules?  It would be a […]

Categories
. Legal ethics

TN Supreme Court rejects proposed resolution of disciplinary case as too lenient

This week sees a rare instance of media publicity regarding something perceived to itself be a rare event (but for which it is difficult to prove that the perception is also reality) – the rejection of a negotiated conditional guilty plea in a lawyer discipline case that had been approved by a hearing panel, and […]

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. Legal ethics

The Opposite of a Role Model

I am very pleased to be one of the speakers at tomorrow’s 2015 TBA Litigation Section annual seminar in Nashville.  I’ll be spending an hour in the afternoon providing some ethics education (hopefully with some entertainment sprinkled in) using the multitude of mistakes and misdeeds of a particular lawyer who practiced outside of Tennessee until, […]

Categories
. Legal ethics

Washington decides to also let LLLTs share fees and have ownership interest in law firms

This news out of Washington state is an unfortunate development if you had hopes that the concept of Limited License Legal Technicians (LLTs) might be a more broadly adopted cure for the “justice gap” that ails the profession in many parts of the country.  Washington state’s decision to permit lawyers to share attorney fees with […]

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. Legal ethics

A lawyer’s public interview that should never have happened…

This is not a political blog, nor even a civil rights law blog.  So, there would be no reason for me to write a word here that has anything to do with the Walter Scott incident.  But this is a blog about legal ethics and lawyering issues, and the former lawyer for the police officer […]

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. Legal ethics

Ethical issues when dealing with difficult lawyers

I am looking forward to the opportunity tomorrow to speak at a seminar put on for, and sponsored by, the young lawyer’s division of the Tennessee Bar Association.  I will get to speak about ethics issues that can arise when dealing with difficult counsel.  I’m hoping I haven’t been invited in order to be the […]

Categories
. Legal ethics

Drunk and disorderly is no way to attend a CLE

The story of a Virginia lawyer who has now been suspended for 6 months as a result of apparently drinking and being drunk while in attendance at a CLE event is making the rounds.   There is a part of me that is a bit surprised that something like this does not happen more often […]

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. Legal ethics

Another 2014 Ethics Roadshow update – microchip, macro suspension

Another of the lawyers I spoke about some at last year’s Ethics Roadshow is back in the news.  As an example of the power of disciplinary authorities to pursue emergency suspensions on an indefinite basis when a lawyer is perceived to be a threat to the public, we highlighted the travails of a Florida lawyer […]

Categories
. Legal ethics

A timely reminder about the importance of pro bono efforts

On March 31, the Tennessee Supreme Court prudently decided not to turn Tennessee’s mechanism for lawyers to provide information about how much pro bono they perform each year into a mandatory obligation.   Mandatory reporting could have placed lawyers at risk of the administrative suspension of their license for being unwilling to provide such information. […]