He said he is "constrained by the
canons of ethics" from addressing anything other than allegations directed at his client.
At least since the adoption of the ABA
Canons of Ethics, the privilege of practicing law has required lawyers to hold inviolate information about a client or a client's representation beyond that which is protected by the attorney-client privilege, the opinion elaborates.
All of the
canons of ethics in journalism were still swirling in my 21-year-old head from the University of Missouri School of Journalism, the world's oldest (established in 1908) and (wait for it) still the best school of journalism on the planet.
These efforts took three primary forms: the 1908
Canons of Ethics and model oath, the 1969 Model Code of Professional Responsibility, and the 1983 Model Rules of Professional Conduct.
I objected to several
canons of ethics. By a 6-4 vote, with one abstention, the bar recommended that I not be admitted, in part because I dissented from swearing to those canons.
The allegation must be taken seriously as it is a violation of the
canons of ethics and the lawyer's oath taken prior to entering the practice of law.
Yet the
canons of ethics, to which all lawyers must subscribe, provide that a lawyer cannot represent a client where the lawyer's own interest may materially limit that representation.
Although the notion of formal
canons of ethics for judges in the United States is a phenomenon of the early twentieth century, the concept of impartiality derives from ancient law.
"the lawyers who drafted the original
canons of ethics were quite
The ASAE P-412 Professional Ethics Committee recommended removing in their entirety, the "Suggested Guidelines for Use with the Fundamental
Canons of Ethics" from Par.
He says there are already many accountants and attorneys operating in a unified structure absolutely within the
canons of ethics. "The difference in an MDP is when CPAs and attorneys are in the same firm under the same ownership/management structure," Blackburn says.