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DOJ Says They Can No Longer Afford To Respect The Attorney-Client Privilege [View all]
DOJ Says They Can No Longer Afford To Respect The Attorney-Client Privilege
24 Jul 2014 at 10:17 AM
Department of Justice, White-Collar Crime
By Matt Kaiser
....
Ok, now lets suppose that you are locked up. ... Your lawyer is working on your appeal while youre in the Bureau of Prisons. Youre not lucky enough to be dripping with cash. You want a good defense, even a very good defense, but youre also watching your dollars. ... Or, perhaps youre CJA {Criminal Justice Act} and a judge is watching your lawyers hours not being terribly eager to pay for much beyond the basic package when it comes to representation. ... For whatever reason suppose you read about the Sixth Amendments right to counsel back in Junior High you decide that youd like to talk to your lawyer about your case.
....
(4) You can use CorrLinks the prison email system. Think of it as AOL, except instead of being for old people, its for people in a federal prison. Its fast, its free, and it comes with a notice saying the prison can read your email. ... Lets assume that defense lawyers need to communicate with their clients about a complicated matter of some urgency. ... Like a court case.
....
And the predictable thing is happening as a result as the New York Times reports, federal prosecutors are reading emails between attorneys and their clients in white-collar cases. ... Because money is the reason at least one federal prosecutor is offering for why its ok:
{United States District Court Judge Dora L. Irizarry} seemed to take particular offense at an argument by a prosecutor
who suggested that prosecutors merely wanted to avoid the expense and hassle of having to separate attorney-client emails from other emails sent via {CorrLinks}.
Thats right DOJ says it gets to read attorney client emails, because it would be too expensive to cull non-attorney client emails!
https://pmatep5f7b.execute-api.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/ProdStage