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Ethics of Joint Representations: Keeping Secrets and Telling Tales

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Description

Representing two or more clients in a business or commercial transaction is full of potential ethical traps. It's essential that clients understand the potential for conflicts of interest, how confidential information is shared among the joint clients, how negotiating strategies may be altered because of the joint representation, and the real risk to the transaction if clients eventually develop unresolvable disputes among themselves.

Counseling clients about information flows and obtaining a written waiver of conflicts from all clients are essential first steps but not the end of the process.

This program provides a real-world guide to representing two or more clients in a business or commercial transaction.

  • Understanding information flows and potential conflicts of interest
  • Counseling clients about sharing of confidential information – and its implications
  • Negotiation ethics when representing multiple clients
  • Drafting conflict of interest waivers
  • Attorney-client privilege issues involved in joint representations
  • What to do when jointly represented clients disagree

Contributors

  • William Freivogel

    William Freivogel is the principal of Freivogel Ethics Consulting and is an independent consultant to law firms on ethics and risk management. He was a trial lawyer for 22 years and has practiced in the areas of legal ethics and lawyer malpractice for more than 25 years. He is chair of the Editorial Board of the ABA/BNA Lawyers' Manual on Professional Conduct. He maintains the website Freivogel on Conflicts. Mr. Freivogel is a graduate of the University of Illinois (Champaign), where he received his B.S. and LL.B.

    Click here for more information about William.

  • Thomas E. Spahn

    Thomas E. Spahn is a partner in the McLean, Virginia office of McGuireWoods, LLP, where he has a broad complex commercial, business and securities litigation practice. He also has a substantial practice advising businesses on properly creating and preserving the attorney-client privilege and work product protections. For more than 20 years he has lectured extensively on legal ethics and professionalism and has written "The Attorney-Client Privilege and the Work Product Doctrine: A Practitioner's Guide," a 750 page treatise published by the Virginia Law Foundation. Mr. Spahn has served as member of the ABA Standing Committee on Ethics and Professional Responsibility and as a member of the Virginia State Bar's Legal Ethics Committee. He received his B.A., magna cum laude, from Yale University and his J.D. from Yale Law School

    Click here for more information about Thomas.

December 3, 2021
Fri 1:00 PM EST

Duration 1H 0M

This live web event has ended.

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