Lawyers Taught to Lie?
Here is an article from a very famous attorney, John W. Cooley, who is also an adjunct professor at Northwestern University School of Law.
DECEPTION IS ACCEPTABLE ... it's all just a matter of degree.
The following article is a deep discussion of the ACCEPTABLE LIMITS OF DECEPTION!
Let's say that again.
This is an entire article discussing the
ACCEPTABLE LIMITS OF DECEPTION... because
DECEPTION IS ACCEPTABLE... it's just a matter of degree.
This article is a SEQUEL to an article John Cooley wrote for LOYOLA UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO LAW REVIEW.
(This is a an official, sanctioned, scholarly publication of Loyola University regarding matters of law.)
"Defining The Ethical Limits Of Acceptable Deception In Mediation"
Defining The Ethical Limits Of Acceptable Deception In Mediation
John W. Cooley:
John W. Cooley is a former United States Magistrate, Assistant United States Attorney, Senior Staff Attorney for the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, and a litigation partner in a Chicago law firm. He is a past Chair of the Mediation Committee of the ABA Section of Dispute Resolution. He is a Fellow of the American Bar Foundation, the International Academy of Mediators, and the Chartered Institute of Arbitrators, London, England. In private practice in the Chicago area, he is a mediator and arbitrator on the ADR panel of JAMS (The Resolution Experts®). He has served as a Special Master for federal judges and as an arbitrator and mediator in a wide variety of complex, multi-million dollar commercial disputes, both domestic and international. He is an Adjunct Professor at Northwestern University School of Law where he teaches a course on negotiation and mediation.
I'm sure I could find dozens of similar articles, along with first hand accounts, of deception being taught as a useful practice by law schools and law professors.
Is this really necessary?