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Legal Ethics and Professional Responsibility Commons

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University of Richmond

Journal

Virginia Code of Professional Responsibility

Publication Year

Articles 1 - 3 of 3

Full-Text Articles in Legal Ethics and Professional Responsibility

Building Chinese Walls In Virginia: Should Virginia Recognize The Chinese Wall Defense To Vicarious Disqualification?, C. Randolph Sullivan Jan 1992

Building Chinese Walls In Virginia: Should Virginia Recognize The Chinese Wall Defense To Vicarious Disqualification?, C. Randolph Sullivan

University of Richmond Law Review

A Chinese wall is essentially a screening mechanism set up within an institution to act as an "impermeable barrier to intrafirm exchange of confidential information." To prevent inadvertent "leakage" of confidential information, a number of precautions may be taken, including the establishment of organizational and physical structures designed to separate those who possess information from those who should not have it." Although of relatively new use in the legal profession, this type of "wall" is not new. Banks and securities firms, in an effort to protect their clients' financial confidences, routinely erect Chinese walls.


Annual Survey Of Virginia Law: Professional Responsibility, Susan B. Spielberg Jan 1989

Annual Survey Of Virginia Law: Professional Responsibility, Susan B. Spielberg

University of Richmond Law Review

This year, 1989, may become known as the Ethics Year as accounts of questionable behavior of public, governmental and leading business figures, many of whom are lawyers, proliferate in the media. Questionable ethical behavior leads to the erosion of public confidence in the legal profession and demonstrates the need for increased scrutiny of the conduct of lawyers in both their professional and private capacities.


The Status Of Lawyer Advertising In Virginia: What Is Good Taste?, Carol Anne Weiss Jan 1985

The Status Of Lawyer Advertising In Virginia: What Is Good Taste?, Carol Anne Weiss

University of Richmond Law Review

When Abraham Lincoln wanted to attract clients to his law practice in 1837, he ran a simple advertisement announcing his services in an Illinois newspaper. Despite the precedent set by "Honest Abe," fifty years later the American Bar Association banned legal advertising and solicitation. Today, there is no absolute ban on legal advertising. A need exists for information regarding legal assistance, and in today's commercially-oriented society, it is not surprising that members of the legal profession want to advertise the availability of their services.