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Lawyers...Yuk
In my area there's an ad campaign going on to promote lawyers being good guys.
One ad describes how a black woman started her own business.... because of a lawyer. Nice try, but this sort of thing keeps rearing it's ugly head. Quote:
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Judges are even worse... they can do no wrong ...unless they piss off other judges or very powerful politicians. Is it any wonder they sit (hide)behind bullet proof benches. They are going to have to come up with one hell of an ad campaign. |
I agree...I love those "The adjuster works for the Insurance company" ads. Being I used to work in insruance claims. The majority of the attorneys take 40% off the top of any settlement you get. Some are more, depending on the amount a claimant receives. I hated the fact that people would get 1/2 or less (after paying taxes as well) of what they would have had they not hired lawyer.
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I know many fine lawyers who take their ethical code seriously, don't overcharge, and sincerely want to help people.
Of course, I know asshole lawyers, too. In 20 years in the business, the good ones outweigh the bad. People are people--some good, some stupid and venal--no matter what their profession. |
There are plenty of problems with the system, but they aren't the fault of all lawyers. If you ever get charged with a crime, I'm sure you will be very happy to have one.
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Yea, I am not a big fan of Lawyers.
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the above story does not describe a lawyers actions. It describes a plaintiff's actions--the fact that he is a lawyer is immaterial to the facts of the lawsuit, so it would not rise to the level of an ethical violation. He's only doing what millions of other litigious plaintiffs do. Sounds like he pissed off the judge, however, which is never a good thing, and he could be subject to sanctions (i.e., a fine) for filing a frivolous suit.
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Well, plaintiffs can and do conduct their cases on their own, pro se, and they are often as stupid as this one.
In addition, lawyers must follow their clients wishes, and I can tell you that many, many times, clients want to prosecute suits against the advice of their attorneys. That kind of litigious climate is the real problem, not lawyers wanting to earn a living like everyone else. Yes, I agree there are problems with the system, but I'm sure glad the system is in place. Are there abusers of the system? Sure, absolutely, but there are as many greedy plaintiffs out there as are greedy lawyers. |
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Nobody is forced to, unless they are judged mentally incompetent to make the decision. But, lawyer or not, it is discouraged to handle your own case- "fool for a client" and all that.
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and that adage is demonstrably correct in this case
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So all the Good Lawyers who fail to reign in their unethical professional colleagues are, in my opinion, just as guilty. I mean, if anybody can make it hard for someone to do something its a lawyer. So the inaction of the so-called Good Lawyers is especially troublesome. Until the good ones step up to the plate and enforce their own code of ethics then they might just as well be bad. Which brings us back to Bruce's original point. I have an idea for an ad campaign too. It goes something like this: Shakespeare: "...let's kill all the lawyers." Stand up comic: "...what to you call tossing 500 lawyers overboard?" Narrator: "...the legal profession is broken. It was broken by the very people who built it. Let's disbar every attorney in the United States and make all of them re-apply to a citizen's board for the right to practice law. That way, all the good lawyers who apparently are content to let their legal brethren rape the legal system for their own personal enrichment can continue to serve the public and at least allow us to do the job they don't have the nads to do themselves." Then we can start a pool. How long before Beestie is served with an injunction against airing the ad? I'll go first: 13 seconds. |
I don't agree that the person spoken about in the opinion column posted has violated any attorney ethical standard. Stupid, yes--unethical no.
I read the disciplinary actions against lawyers in Texas every month, and I assure you that actions ARE taken by good lawyers against the bad. This kind of self-policing is similar to other professions, such as doctors and engineers, and it isn't a perfect one. It just makes me sad when I read opinions like this, because they are uninformed. Most lawyers I know are wonderful people, who work long hours and give so much back to the community. Yet the good things are never noticed in favor of "oh, let's kill all the lawyers." It's just like anything else, I guess--good people go unnoticed and unlauded. Very sad. |
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