Can you keep a secret? If you can’t, you probably shouldn’t be a practicing attorney. Lawyers are, among other things, professional secret keepers. We, as lawyers, are bound to keep client confidences, communications and a myriad of other secrets. We have an ethical obligation not to vouchsafe any information that, very broadly speaking, relates to a client representation.
This duty of confidentiality raises the following question: To what extent must we also keep inviolate other lawyer-type information gleaned in the course of representation, that may appear sacrosanct, such as judges’ and courts’ reputations?
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