Admin

Login/Account Details

Other Users
Legalnut.com Home arrow Legal Forums
Legal Forums
Welcome, Guest
Please Login or Register.    Lost Password?
Re:Attorney-Client Privilege (1 viewing) (1) Guest
Go to bottom Post Reply Favoured: 0
TOPIC: Re:Attorney-Client Privilege
#132
Jackie (User)
Expert Boarder
Posts: 91
graphgraph
User Offline
Attorney-Client Privilege 1 Year, 7 Months ago Karma: 3  
I'm not sure what category this would fall under so I'm submitting it under ethics. As you may have heard, in light of the recent criminal inviestigations and indictments of major corporations, the feds are beginning to ask for waivers of the attorney client privilege. They've even been asking corporations to refuse to pay for the defense of indicted employees before (which I would assume is a violation of their employment contract at the very least). Any thoughts?
 
Report to moderator   Logged Logged  
  The administrator has disabled public write access.
#174
Sumo (User)
Gold Boarder
Posts: 166
graph
User Offline
Re:Attorney-Client Privilege 1 Year, 6 Months ago Karma: 5  
Refusing to defend an executive employee is purely a question of their contract and corporate policy. Although the Corporation may have a fiduciary duty depending on the transaction. The attorney-client priviledge is a very tricky thing; first it belongs to the client, second privledge may have various levels, work product, dicussion, notes could all be under a separate privledge; third privledge in a corporate setting can mean various things and may not be waiveable depending on the people invloved and the setting of the overall transaction involved in between those people. Remember, a corporation acts through its agents, so the privledge may not belong to the corporation, it may belong to an employee, it all just depends on very specific facts.
 
Report to moderator   Logged Logged  
  The administrator has disabled public write access.
Go to top Post Reply
Powered by FireBoardget the latest posts directly to your desktop
Copyright © 2006 - 2008 Rochester Ideas, LLC. All rights reserved. Our site is valid CSS Our site is valid XHTML 1.0 Transitional