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Ethics in Context: July 2017
Chair(s):
Carole L. Basri, C. Evan Stewart, Stephen D. Brody, Katie M. Lachter
Practice Area:
Corporate law,
Ethics and professional responsibility,
Litigation
Published:
Jul 2017
i
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ISBN:
9781402429408
PLI Item #:
180584
CHB Spine #:
B2340
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Table of Contents
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Front Matter
Faculty Bios
Table of Contents
Chapter 1. New York Rules of Professional Conduct
Chapter 2. Ethics and In-House Counsel (July 25, 2016)
Chapter 3. Isabel C. Franco, Ch. 2: International Attorney-Client Privilege, Practising Law Institute, International Corporate Practice: A Practitioner’s Guide to Global Success (November 2016)
Chapter 4. Carole L. Basri and Irving Kagan, Ch. 8: The Client—Ethical Considerations, Practising Law Institute, Corporate Legal Departments (4th Edition) (May 2016)
Chapter 5. Carole L. Basri and Irving Kagan, Ch. 9: Confidentiality of Communications, Practising Law Institute, Corporate Legal Departments (4th Edition) (May 2017) (Excerpt)
Chapter 6. Carole L. Basri and Irving Kagan, Ch. 11: Corporate Compliance Programs, Practising Law Institute, Corporate Legal Departments (4th Edition) (October 2016) (Excerpt)
Chapter 7. New York County Lawyers Association Committee on Professional Ethics, Formal Opinion 746, Ethical Conflicts Caused by Lawyers as Whistleblowers under the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform Act of 2010 (October 7, 2013)
Chapter 8. New York County Lawyers Association Committee on Professional Ethics, Formal Opinion 749, A Lawyer’s Ethical Duty of Technological Competence with Respect to the Duty to Protect a Client’s Confidential Information from Cybersecurity Risk and Handling E-Discovery When Representing Clients in a Litigation or Government Investigation (February 21, 2017)
Chapter 9. The Association of the Bar of the City of New York Committee on Professional Ethics, Formal Opinion 2016-2: Representing a Non-Party Witness at a Deposition in a Proceeding Where the Attorney Also Represents a Named Party (July 22, 2016)
Chapter 10. Rules of the Court of Appeals for the Registration of In-House Counsel, State of New York, 22 NYCRR 522
Chapter 11. Dynamic 3D Geosolutions LLC v. Schlumberger Limited, 2016 WL 4729505 (Fed. Cir. 2016)
Chapter 12. Attorney Conduct “Up the Ladder Reporting” Guidance for Legal Department Attorneys (PowerPoint slides)
Chapter 13. Stephen D. Brody, Moshe G. Peters and Jillian Somers Donovan, Zealous Advocacy and the Discovery Process: Revisiting National Day Laborer After Six Years
Chapter 14. DC Bar Association, Ethics Opinion 371: Social Media II: Use of Social Media in Providing Legal Services (November 2016)
Chapter 15. New York County Lawyers Association Committee on Professional Ethics, Formal Opinion 749, A Lawyer’s Ethical Duty of Technological Competence with Respect to the Duty to Protect a Client’s Confidential Information from Cybersecurity Risk and Handling E-Discovery When Representing Clients in a Litigation or Government Investigation (February 21, 2017)
Chapter 16. Jeremy R. Feinberg, Do’s and Don’ts of Ethics Research
Chapter 17. Anthony E. Davis and Katie M. Lachter, Lateral Attorney Movement: Pre-Departure and Recruitment, New York Law Journal, May 7, 2012
Chapter 18. Anthony E. Davis and Katie M. Lachter, Do’s and Don’ts of Lateral Attorney Movement: Managing the Risks, New York Law Journal, March 5, 2012
Chapter 19. Peter R. Jarvis and Katie M. Lachter, Civility: The Ultimate Legal Weapon?, Bloomberg Law Reports—Law Firm Management, Vol. 2, No. 1 (2011)
Chapter 20. The Association of the Bar of the City of New York Committee on Professional Ethics, Formal Opinion 2014-1: Ethical Considerations for Lawyers Contemplating Business Arrangements with Non-Legal Organizations, January 1, 2014
Chapter 21. The Association of the Bar of the City of New York Committee on Professional Ethics, Formal Opinion 2013-2: A Lawyer’s Obligation to Take Action If, After the Conclusion of a Proceeding, the Lawyer Comes to Know That Material Evidence Offered by the Lawyer, the Lawyer’s Client or a Witness Called by the Lawyer During the Proceeding Was False, May 30, 2013
Chapter 22. The Association of the Bar of the City of New York Committee on Professional Ethics, Formal Opinion 2013-1: Duties to Prospective Clients After Beauty Contests and Other Preliminary Meetings, Oct. 1, 2013
Chapter 23. Representing Individuals in International Investigations (September/October 2016)
Chapter 24. Recent U.K. Decision Jeopardizes U.S. Privilege Assertions for Witness Interviews (January 30, 2017)
Chapter 25. The RBS Rights Issue Litigation (December 8, 2016)
Chapter 26. Attorney-Client Privilege and the Work Product Doctrine in Internal Investigations (April 20, 2017) (PowerPoint slides)
Chapter 27. The Intra-Firm Privilege and Representing Banks and Financial Institutions (April 20, 2017)
Chapter 28. Intra-Firm Privilege Representing Bank and Financial Institutions (PowerPoint slides) (April 20, 2017)
Chapter 29. Attorney-Client Privilege: Misunderestimated or Misunderstood? (October 20, 2014)
Chapter 30. ‘Exes’ and the Attorney-Client Privilege
Chapter 31. Judge Gets Common Interest Privilege Spot-On! (April 7, 2015)
Chapter 32. Ohio Takes a Bite Out of the Big Apple (September 7, 2012)
Chapter 33. Caveat Corporate Litigator: The First Circuit Sets Back the Attorney Work Product Doctrine (Summer 2010)
Chapter 34. Good Golly Miss Molly!: The Attorney Work Product Doctrine Takes Another Hit (Winter 2012)
Chapter 35. The D.C. Circuit: Wrong and Wronger! (Winter 2015)
Chapter 36. A Tale of Two Judges (Summer 2012)
Chapter 37. Lawyers and the Border Patrol: The Challenges of Multi-Jurisdictional Practice (Summer 2011)
Chapter 38. Navigating State-Based Ethics Rules and Sarbanes-Oxley Requirements (September 21, 2015)
Chapter 39. Whistleblower Law: What Rights Do Ratting Lawyers Have? (March 14, 2014)
Chapter 40. The Rivera Precedent: What You Don’t Know Can Hurt You (May 2015)
Chapter 41. Squaring the Circle: Can Bad Legal Precedent Just Be Wished Away? (Winter 2014)
Chapter 42. “Positively 4th Street”: Lawyers and the “Scripting” of Witnesses (Summer 2014)
Chapter 43. Thus Spake Zarathustra (and Other Cautionary Tales for Lawyers) (Winter 2010)
Chapter 44. Mad Dogs and Englishmen (Summer 2013)
Chapter 45. Finders Keepers, Losers Weepers? (Summer 2016)
Chapter 46. The End of Conflicts of Interest?: Courts Warm Up to Advance Waivers
Chapter 47. The Legal Profession and Conflicts: Ain’t No Mountain High Enough? (Fall 2007)
Chapter 48. “Here’s Johnny!”: Carnacing the Future of the SEC’s Preemption Overreach (April 28, 2014)
Chapter 49. “Pigs Get Fat, Hogs Get Slaughtered: Keeping Lawyers Out of the Slaughterhouse” (Summer 2015)
Chapter 50. In-House Counsel as Whistleblower: A Rat Without a Remedy? (August 21, 2008)
Chapter 51. Of Mice, Men, Migratory Lawyers, and Multijurisdictional Practice (September 10, 2014)
Chapter 52. Ethics Corner: “Inadvertent Disclosure—Traps Await the Unwary”
Chapter 53. The New York Court of Appeals Takes the Wrong Fork in the Road on the Common Interest Privilege
Chapter 54. Ethical Considerations in the Representation of Multiple Clients (April 21, 2017)
Index
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