Thursday, August 28, 2008

Ethical Question

The professor for my Legal Profession class begins each day with a quote. Here is today's:
One of the highest services the lawyer can render to society is to appear in court on behalf of clients whose causes are in disfavor with the general public. -- ABA and AALS, Professional Responsibility: Report of the Joint Conference (1958)

What does this bring up in your mind? Mine: KKK free speech cases, religious rights, academic freedom cases (like the professor at U of Wisconsin who taught that the US government set up 9/11). What about when taking the case might lead to the downfall of your firm? For example, if a firm decides to represent a KKK member in a very public case, their law student recruitment might be hurt along with the volume of cases they can bring in. Do they still have to take it?

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

It makes me think of To Kill A Mokingbird. My uncle is an attourney, and he says that Atticus Finch is the ideal that every lawyer should work toward.

Anonymous said...

10:59 am needs to re-read the title of that book again. It is spelled "Mockingbird," not "Mokingbird."

It is also spelled "attorney," not "attourney."

I hope that the posters on this blog work toward emulating my grammar rather than that of the poster at 10:59 am.

signed,
Grammar Cop