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Attorney-Client Privilege, Ethical Rules, And The Impaired Criminal Defendant, The , James A. Cohen
Attorney-Client Privilege, Ethical Rules, And The Impaired Criminal Defendant, The , James A. Cohen
Faculty Scholarship
Attorneys who represent possibly incompetent defendants charged with criminal conduct face difficult ethical issues, implicating professional duties of loyalty, zealous representation, and confidentiality-as an ethical question and as a matter of the law of evidence. The principles of agency underlying the attorney-client relationship are also implicated when the defendant's capacity is in doubt. In the ordinary criminal case, the client has at least implicitly authorized his lawyer's conduct. But if the defendant is impaired, the client may not have the mental capacity to authorize the attorney's actions. Defense counsel representing the possibly incompetent criminal defendant will often be the only …