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Saturday, August 12, 2006

from legal watch

Legal Blog Watch
Lawyers and Pro Bono
Back when I was in law school, I always envisioned pro bono work as representing a client who couldn't afford a lawyer. Like the penniless elderly woman living in an uninhabitable apartment building facing eviction by an evil slumlord. The minimum-wage mom with three kids trying to get a divorce from an abusive spouse. A defendant accused of a capital crime who might be able to show he was wrongly accused if he could afford a lawyer and a decent team of experts rather than the lawyer assigned by the court to take the case for a capped fee of $3,000. Or the homeless men I used to represent here in D.C. when I started my legal career, who were trying to recover unemployment benefits or clean up their credit that was tarnished when they signed up for loans from a sham vocational program. 

So much for my innocent visions of pro bono; apparently, it's gone and grown up while I wasn't looking. As Linda Singer writes in this article,  Why Lawyers Should Take on Pro Bono, pro bono projects now encompass providing free work for banks to help them deal with Patriot Act concerns or evaluating the success of the No Child Left Behind Act or the effectiveness of state and local government efforts to help Hurricane Katrina victims back to self-sufficiency.

I know that all of these efforts help the public. Yet, should this all count as pro bono? Do lawyers really need incentive to work on projects where they interact with banks and government officials and, in the process, build their contacts and resumes? And while these programs are undoubtedly important, pro bono efforts devoted on these matters diverts attention from representing individuals whose matters don't make headlines, but who really do not have any other options.

What's your opinion? Should we encourage large firms to participate in large, "impact case" matters pro bono? And if we do, how do we address the problem of the individuals who need pro bono help?

Posted by Carolyn Elefant on August 11, 2006 at 02:16 PM | Permalink

Exposure of Recent Terrorism Plot: What Does It Prove About the Bush Administration's Policies?
nwide wiretaps or datamining bank records. It was uncovered by classic law enforcement techniques.

It's still too early to determine what actions contributed to the exposure of the liquid explosives plot. But expect the blogosphere to continue to debate these issues as the story unfolds.

Posted by Carolyn Elefant on August 11, 2006 at 02:13 PM | Permalink

Freebies for Summer: Reading and Taking It With You
A couple of Law.com's affiliate bloggers offered some summer freebies today: Bruce Macewen tips us off to a neat, free online book by Patrick McKenna, The First Hundred Days: Transitioning A New Managing Partner. And  Future Lawyer Rick Georges posts about Tom Mighell's recent article, Links for the Road Warrior, which tells lawyers, just in time for summer vacation, how they can keep in close touch w ith the home office even while they're on the road. 

Posted by Carolyn Elefant on August 11, 2006 at 02:06 PM | Permalink

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1 comment:

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