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Law
Firm Philosophy
No.
1. The United States
Constitution guarantees that every citizen accused of a
criminal offense is entitled to effective representation.
In my view, effective representation by a lawyer is dependent
upon the lawyer's experience, thoroughness, creativity,
aggressiveness, and professionalism. Of course, a lawyer
is most effective when adept at both oral and written presentation
of the rights and claims of the client, to whom he must
be exclusively loyal.
No.
2.
Not only should a lawyer take every possible lawful action
to achieve the best possible result for a client, he or
she should also promptly and fully inform the client as
to each and every development in the client's case.
No.
3.
Despite the lawyer having practiced for many years and having
represented many clients, he or she should never forget
that as to each client, the matter in which representation
occurs may well be the most important matter in the client's
life. Each client has real problems and real concerns, and
his or her lawyer should be responsive at all times to any
question or concerns the client desires to express. No matter
how significant or trivial such question or concern may
in fact be, if it is important to the client the lawyer
should immediately address it.
No.
4.
A lawyer should zealously protect the client's rights utilizing
all proper means, and through experience and confidence
be willing to vigorously advocate those rights in a courtroom
setting.
No.
5.
No
lawyer should undertake the enormous responsibility of representing
a citizen accused of a crime unless he or she is willing
to acknowledge the awesome nature of such responsibility,
given that his or her performance may well impact a client's
liberty or other future life direction.
No.
6.
Because a lawyer is the client's spokesperson in all contexts
within a given matter, that same lawyer whom is selected
by the client to be such spokesperson should fulfill that
responsibility. Only with a client's knowledge and consent
should an associate or another lawyer appear or act on the
client's behalf.
No.
7.
Because the selection of one's lawyer is a crucial decision
to a citizen/potential client, that citizen should be encouraged
to meet with a sufficient number of potential lawyers in
order to intelligently make the extremely important decision
as to which lawyer to retain. In order to encourage such
informed choice making, a lawyer should not charge any fee
for an initial consultation. That consultation should occur
face-to-face with the lawyer, and not over the telephone,
in order for a meaningful consultation to occur. During
such meeting, a lawyer should quote a reasonable fee for
his or her services.
No.
8.
A lawyer should only undertake representation of as many
clients as he or she can effectively represent. A "volume"
practice may be good for the lawyer but it may be bad for
his or her client, for whom "corner-cutting" is
unacceptable.
No.
9.
A
lawyer should insure that communications with a client are
confidential, allowing the client to rest assured that the
lawyer can be made aware of the entire situation without
compromising to any degree his or her absolute loyalty to
the client.
No.
10.
Virtually
never can a lawyer honestly guarantee a particular result
in a case. However, the lawyer should always be able to guarantee
that he or she will do absolutely everything that is lawfully
possible in order to vigorously protect the rights of a client.
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