Lawyers in the Dock: Learning from Attorney Disciplinary Procedings
Richard L. Abel
Abstract
Our legal system is built on the trustworthiness of lawyers: clients must trust their fidelity, adversaries their undertakings, and courts the veracity of their legal and factual claims. Lawyers who betray trust undermine these foundations. Although legal scholars focus on refining the ethical rules, we know very little about the nature and reasons for their violation. The files of disciplinary proceedings are an underutilized resource for understanding lawyer deviance. This book mines the reports of New York disciplinary proceedings to illuminate the three most common and troubling categories ... More
Our legal system is built on the trustworthiness of lawyers: clients must trust their fidelity, adversaries their undertakings, and courts the veracity of their legal and factual claims. Lawyers who betray trust undermine these foundations. Although legal scholars focus on refining the ethical rules, we know very little about the nature and reasons for their violation. The files of disciplinary proceedings are an underutilized resource for understanding lawyer deviance. This book mines the reports of New York disciplinary proceedings to illuminate the three most common and troubling categories: neglect of clients, overcharging, and excessive zeal. Because their livelihoods are at stake and they possess technical skills and resources, disciplined lawyers litigate these cases very thoroughly; those found guilty offer intimate personal details in mitigation during the penalty phase. The book concludes with practical recommendations for reducing lawyer deviance and restoring trust.
Keywords:
trust,
legal ethics,
lawyer deviance,
neglect,
overcharging,
excessive zeal
Bibliographic Information
| Print publication date: 2008 |
Print ISBN-13: 9780195374230 |
| Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: January 2009 |
DOI:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195374230.001.0001 |