Event Title
The Role and Responsibility of Defense Counsel
Description
How does a defense attorney's role change when defending a high-profile client? Beyond traditional legal defense, must a modern defense attorney seek to protect a client's public image? When speaking with the media, what rules, if any, should constrain a defense attorney's behavior? Does media coverage affect the fairness of a trial?
These are some of the questions dealt with in Panel #4: The Role Of Defense Counsel, moderated by Robert Mosteller, and featuring Laurie Levenson, Michael Tigar and Harold Haddon.
Laurie Levenson begins the discussion by outlining some of the rules governing attorney behavior in the media, with special emphasis on the ABA Model Rules of Professional Conduct. Next, Michael Tigar discusses how the press has traditionally served as a watchdog against government misconduct in high-profile cases, and how media coverage of cases from his own career has helped his clients. Lastly, Harold Haddon provides a word of caution about the dangers attorneys face in using the media in high-profile cases and discusses how media coverage can hurt defendants by leading to premature public judgment.
Questions/themes/discussion topics
- ABA Model Rule of Professional Conduct 3.6: Trial Publicity
- Attorney conduct not prohibited by ABA MRPC 3.6
- Media gag orders
- Allowing video cameras in the courtroom
- Proposed rules to govern legal commentators unconnected to a proceeding
- Historic instances of media coverage acting as a judicial "watchdog"
- Examples of media coverage aiding defendants in high-profile cases
- The effect of defense attorney' statements on the public perception of defendants
- The difficulty of changing public perception of a defendant's guilt or innocence
Date
9-28-2007 2:45 PM
The Role and Responsibility of Defense Counsel
How does a defense attorney's role change when defending a high-profile client? Beyond traditional legal defense, must a modern defense attorney seek to protect a client's public image? When speaking with the media, what rules, if any, should constrain a defense attorney's behavior? Does media coverage affect the fairness of a trial?
These are some of the questions dealt with in Panel #4: The Role Of Defense Counsel, moderated by Robert Mosteller, and featuring Laurie Levenson, Michael Tigar and Harold Haddon.
Laurie Levenson begins the discussion by outlining some of the rules governing attorney behavior in the media, with special emphasis on the ABA Model Rules of Professional Conduct. Next, Michael Tigar discusses how the press has traditionally served as a watchdog against government misconduct in high-profile cases, and how media coverage of cases from his own career has helped his clients. Lastly, Harold Haddon provides a word of caution about the dangers attorneys face in using the media in high-profile cases and discusses how media coverage can hurt defendants by leading to premature public judgment.
Questions/themes/discussion topics
- ABA Model Rule of Professional Conduct 3.6: Trial Publicity
- Attorney conduct not prohibited by ABA MRPC 3.6
- Media gag orders
- Allowing video cameras in the courtroom
- Proposed rules to govern legal commentators unconnected to a proceeding
- Historic instances of media coverage acting as a judicial "watchdog"
- Examples of media coverage aiding defendants in high-profile cases
- The effect of defense attorney' statements on the public perception of defendants
- The difficulty of changing public perception of a defendant's guilt or innocence