Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Raids raise questions on attorney-client privilege

- By David G. Savage Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — The attorney-client privilege is not written into the Constituti­on or federal law, but it is “one of the oldest recognized privileges for confidenti­al communicat­ions,” then-Chief Justice William Rehnquist wrote 20 years ago.

“The privilege is intended to encourage full and frank communicat­ion between attorneys and their clients and thereby promote broader public interests in the observance of law and the administra­tion of justice.”

But it is not an absolute or unlimited protection for privacy, he added, saying it should be “interprete­d in the light of reason and experience.”

Rehnquist spoke for the Supreme Court in 1998 when it upheld a privilege claim by a Washington lawyer who had taken notes when a troubled White House deputy counsel, Vincent Foster, came to see him. Less than two weeks later, Foster committed suicide and independen­t counsel Kenneth Starr went to court years later demanding to see the notes. By a 6-3 vote, the Supreme Court refused, saying that the shield of confidenti­ality did not die with the client.

At other times, the justices sided with the independen­t counsel and decided President Bill Clinton’s White House lawyers could not invoke attorneycl­ient privilege to shield their conversati­ons or notes.

The issue arose again this week after the FBI raided the office, home and hotel room of President Donald Trump’s personal attorney, Michael Cohen. Investigat­ors reportedly were looking for data about payments made by Cohen to women alleged to have had affairs with Trump, including porn actress Stormy Daniels.

“Attorney-client privilege is dead!” Trump tweeted Tuesday.

Here’s a primer about the legal protection:

What is the purpose of the attorney-client privilege?

It allows clients who have a legal problem to talk candidly with a lawyer. Under ordinary rules, any person who has witnessed or heard about a crime can be required to testify about it. But if that ordinary rule applied in law offices, no one would feel comfortabl­e speaking to a lawyer because it could result in confessing to a crime.

What are the limits to the privilege?

The most commonly cited limit is the “crimefraud exception.” Generally, a lawyer and his client cannot be compelled to talk about past crimes. But if the lawyer is working with the client to carry out a continuing or future crime — for example, by preparing a false document or to pay off a witness — their dealings are probably not shielded.

Legal experts also say the privacy privilege covers only specific legal matters and advice, and not all of the possible discussion­s between a lawyer and a client.

“Why is this relevant? Because President Trump has said quite publicly that he did not know what Cohen was doing with respect to the alleged payments to the actress known as Stormy Daniels, payments that appear to be at the core of (New York) investigat­ion,” wrote Washington lawyer Paul Rosenzweig on the Lawfare blog. “If this is true, then it seems that Trump could not have an attorneycl­ient relationsh­ip with Cohen regarding the Daniels payment.”

Who decides whether material seized is protected by privilege or is evidence of a crime?

The Justice Department’s manual says it will have others take the first look. “To protect the attorney-client privilege, … a ‘privilege team’ should be designated, consisting of agents and lawyers not involved in the underlying investigat­ion.” Their task is to protect “privileged material” or “defense strategy” from being disclosed to the agents or prosecutor­s.

If investigat­ors find evidence of other possible crimes, can they use it or turn it over to special counsel Robert Mueller?

Most experts say the answer is yes, but only after judges rule on objections.

“The judge would have identified what could be seized,” Gillers said. “Other items can be seized if without having looked for them, the search uncovers other items that show criminalit­y. The safest course then would be to seize them and go back to the judge for authority to inspect them.”

In Cohen’s case, his defense lawyers will almost surely take the fight to court and argue that items that go beyond the search warrant should be shielded and returned to him.

 ?? SETH WENIG/AP ?? FBI agents raided Michael Cohen’s office, home and hotel room in New York.
SETH WENIG/AP FBI agents raided Michael Cohen’s office, home and hotel room in New York.

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