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COVER STORY:
Legal Ethics
July 27, 2001 Episode no. 448
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BOB ABERNTHEY: When may a lawyer reveal what a client tells him in confidence? The American Bar Association recently made the rule less restrictive. It permits -- but does not require -- lawyers to disclose confidences to prevent, quote, "reasonably certain death or substantial bodily harm."
It remains a gray area, and attorneys who obey the confidentiality rule sometimes do so at the expense of innocent people. Lucky Severson reports
LUCKY SEVERSON: Henry Drake has a lot to think about.
He's lost his family and 12 years of his life sitting on
Georgia's death row.
(to Drake): When you were on death row, you are there to
be killed?
MR.
HENRY DRAKE: Yes sir.
SEVERSON: Do you think about that every day?
MR. DRAKE: Every day.
SEVERSON: What do you think?
MR. DRAKE: All day long, when the door opens, you're
going to die, that's it.
SEVERSON: But Henry Drake was innocent, a victim,
ultimately, of what the legal profession calls "legal ethics."
Twelve years on death row, even though the attorney for
the man who accused him knew Henry was not guilty. The attorney
was simply obeying the confidentiality rule within the code
of legal ethics.
An expert on the subject, New York University Law School
Vice Dean Stephen Gillers. He says if a client knows his
confidentiality is protected, he'll be more inclined to
tell everything, and his attorney can do a better job.
DEAN
STEPHEN GILLERS (New York University Law School): The
confidentiality rule really says to the client, look, I
am here to serve you and I am going to protect your secrets,
you can tell me whatever you want.
SEVERSON: The crime Henry Drake was accused of committing
occurred at this tiny Colbert, Georgia barbershop in December
1975. Here's what we know: William "Pops" Campbell dropped
by for a haircut, claimed he got a bad one, and then beat
the 76-year-old barber, Mr. Eberhart, to death with a claw
hammer. Campbell walked away with $400 in cash. When he
was caught, he told police it was his friend Henry Drake
who committed the murder. Both men were charged with the
murder, and both convicted.
Campbell's public defender was Pat Beall.
MR. PAT BEALL (Public Defender): My response at the
time was that I had a client who was in a pickle, ... "Pops"
Campbell. Henry Drake was never my client.
SEVERSON: William "Pops" Campbell and Henry Drake
ended up here, in what is called, oddly enough, "The Diagnostic
and Classification Prison," which also houses Georgia's
death row. Inside, Campbell told Drake he had signed an
affidavit at the suggestion of a visiting church minister
admitting that he had lied.
SEVERSON: (with Drake, reading from Campbell's affidavit):
"I was the one who killed Mr. Eberhart. Henry wasn't even
there. He didn't have anything to do with it."
Attorney Pat Beall knew Henry Drake was innocent, but felt
obligated to keep it secret while he pursued an appeal to
get his client, William Campbell's, sentence reduced.
MR.
BEALL: I told Campbell, if you want to stay off death
row, his best bet would be to be quiet about that issue.
SEVERSON (to Beall): It seems inconceivable that
you could get a guilty man off and let an innocent man pay
for it with his life.
MR. BEALL: I had my job. My job was to be "Pops"
Campbell's attorney, to do the best that I could do for
"Pops."
SEVERSON: Beall says he consulted his minister and
the state bar about his dilemma. His minister was neutral.
MR. BEALL: The state bar said essentially that my
highest duty was to my client.
SEVERSON: Did you sleep better after that?
MR. BEALL: Yeah, I did.
SEVERSON: Mary Wilkes was fresh out of law school
when her law firm defended Henry Drake, pro bono.
MARY
WILKES (Lawyer): Pat is a very decent person and a very
fine attorney and clearly his interest was doing what he
thought was the right thing to do. At the same time, I felt
somewhat frustrated that in my mind, you've got an innocent
man, you can't stand in the way of him getting a new trial,
and how can you not even think about releasing this information?
SEVERSON: For the average American who might be befuddled
or outraged at the ethics of this case, consider this: what
Pat Beall did was required by state court rules in nearly
every American jurisdiction.
DEAN GILLERS: Today, the lawyer whose client has
confessed to a murder for which an innocent person is on
death row could not reveal that fact to the authorities.
SEVERSON: It wasn't until William Campbell died,
permanently ending his appeals process -- it wasn't until
then that Pat Beall felt he had fulfilled his attorney-client
obligation and was willing to testify on Henry Drake's behalf
-- to get him out of here finally.
MR. BEALL: I felt no qualms after Campbell passed
away to go to trial and testify on Henry Drake's behalf
as his witness.
SEVERSON: Did you feel good about it?
MR. BEALL: Just doing my job.
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SEVERSON: The American Bar Association offers video
seminars of actors portraying attorneys dealing with ethical
situations, but the public gets its impressions about lawyering
from prime-time TV.
Footage from ABC program THE PRACTICE: He's going to kill
again. That's not something to mention in your closing.
Not even something we should think about.
SEVERSON:
TV may do a good job dramatizing ethical dilemmas but usually
doesn't explain that the lawyers are simply obeying the
rules. For instance, the confidentiality rule prohibits
defense attorneys from revealing facts about a past crime.
And the rule in most states makes it very difficult for
an attorney to disclose confidential information except
in the most extreme cases, such as when criminal violence
is imminent.
DEAN GILLERS: What the rule really addresses and
only addresses is the client who walks into a lawyer's office
carrying a gun and says, "I'm fed up with that S.O.B., I'm
going to go and kill him," and storms out of the lawyer's
office.
SEVERSON: No wonder, according to a recent Gallup
poll, the public rates lawyers high, among the top professions,
for prestige, but nearer the bottom for honesty and ethics.
DEAN GILLERS: People might love to hate lawyers,
but when it comes to their own particular problem, they
want their lawyer to be a junkyard dog, to be a real S.O.B.
and to get for them every cent the lawyer can, whether or
not it's fair and just.
SEVERSON: It's not only the public who view lawyers
negatively. Lawyers themselves, particularly new ones, wrestle
with the demands of their profession and their own sense
of what's right.
PROFESSOR
WILLIAM ELWARD (Loyola University Law School -- to students):
Is there room for having a conscience in the practice of
law? Do you think there's room for this?
SEVERSON: Professor William Elward teaches a Loyola
law school class on evidence, with some ethical twists.
KIM (Student): It really bothers me that people think
that if you're going to practice law you can't have ethics,
and I have very strong ethics. And I could not work for
a nursing home as an attorney, if I knew they were doing
bad things.
PROFESSOR ELWARD: But ... you have a summer home, you got
a Lexus, you have a husband, you have direct TV.
SEVERSON: The confidentiality rule comes into play
for corporate behavior as well. Almost every company headquarters
in every American city has at least one corporate attorney
whose job is to keep the company within the law but cannot
violate the confidentiality rule, even when the corporation
is breaking the law.
DEAN GILLERS: Just think about that: a dangerous
product can seriously injure thousands of people, can kill
dozens or hundreds of people, but a lawyer today will not
be allowed to reveal, in a great majority of states, the
prospect of the injury.
SEVERSON: One of the more notable cases occurred
here in Chicago when a corporate attorney blew the whistle
on a potentially dangerous company product and was fired
for it.
When Roger Balla, here with his attorney Alan Amos, heard
that his employer, Gambro Incorporated, intended to sell
substandard filters for kidney dialysis machines, he advised
against it. And then Balla heard the company was going ahead
with the sale anyway. Although Gambro never admitted guilt,
according to the court opinion, the substandard dialyzers
could be dangerous.
MR. ALAN AMOS: Again, this was from the opinion,
"We will sell them to a unit that is not currently our customer,
but who buys only on price."
SEVERSON (to Amos): So price would be the determining
factor, the health of the patient would not be?
MR. AMOS: It seems that way, doesn't it.
SEVERSON:
When Balla heard Gambro was proceeding with the sale he
protested again and was fired, told it was an employee cutback.
The next day he reported [this to] the Food and Drug Administration,
which immediately seized the filters and stopped the sale.
He later sued Gambro, charging that he was fired for blowing
the whistle.
But Roger Balla lost the case. The court ruled that he didn't
deserve compensation for being fired, because he was simply
doing his duty. Illinois is one of the few states that requires
attorneys to report potentially life-threatening wrongdoings
to the authorities.
DEAN GILLERS: It's a very sad case, and very bad
law, and thankfully it's been rejected in a number of other
American jurisdictions.
MR. AMOS: Why let the business prosper because it's
doing something illegal? And yet the lawyer who goes out
on the limb and risks his professional career in order to
adhere to a legal ethic, and reports that, is given no benefit
whatsoever, and the corporation is immune from any lawsuit.
That to me is wrong.
SEVERSON: Every attorney we have spoken with concedes
[that] the confidentiality is not perfect, but defends it
as a fundamental reason the American justice system works.
As for Henry Drake, he's not so sure about legal ethics.
(to Drake): Do you hate William Campbell?
MR. DRAKE: No. No, I don't hate nobody.
SEVERSON: What about the lawyer? Mr. Beall?
MR. DRAKE: He was wrong. He was wrong. He was a wrong
man.
SEVERSON: It will be of little comfort to Henry Drake
that the American Bar Association is considering adding
some exceptions to the confidentiality rule. But most observers
don't expect any significant changes. For RELIGION &
ETHICS NEWSWEEKLY, I'm Lucky Severson near Colbert, Georgia.
BOB ABERNETHY: Most states have laws that are less restrictive than the ABA rule, when it comes to disclosing confidential information between attorney and client.
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Related Links:
Legal Ethics: Selected Resources at the Cornell Law Library
Find links here to other useful legal ethics Web sites.
ABA Center for Professional Responsibility
The Center for Professional Responsibility is a membership organization within the American Bar Association that provides leadership in developing and interpreting standards and scholarly resources in legal ethics, professionalism, and client protection. The site also include a link to ETHICSearch, the ABA's ethics research service.
Legal Ethics.com
Links to articles, rules, and information relating to legal ethics issues as well as legal research resources.
THE NEW YORK TIMES: "A Duty to Warn"
According to Professor Gillers, "Confidentiality is important to a lawyer's relationship with a client, but it should not be allowed to obscure the higher value of protecting human life."
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Related Books:
REGULATION OF LAWYERS: STATUTES AND STANDARDS
by Stephen Gillers
Books by Monroe H. Freedman:
UNDERSTANDING LAWYERS' ETHICS
LAWYERS' ETHICS IN AN ADVERSARY SYSTEM
BELEAGUERED RULERS: THE PUBLIC OBLIGATION OF THE PROFESSIONAL
by William F. May
ETHICS IN PRACTICE: LAWYERS' ROLES, RESPONSIBILITIES, AND REGULATION
edited by Deborah L. Rhode
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