As lawyers, time is our most finite resource. We have duties to our clients to ensure that their matters are handled in a timely and competent manner, but there are only so many hours in a day. Busy law firms have been relying on contract lawyers for decades to meet client needs when demand is high and time is low. Bringing in outside lawyers can implicate several important ethical rules that every firm must know. In this program, we will discuss the duty of competence ((1.1), the duty of diligence (1.3), communications with the firm’s client (1.4), conflicts of interest (1.7, 1.10), fees charged to the client (1.5, 1.5.1), the duty to maintain client confidences (1.6), aiding and abetting the unauthorized practice of law (5.5), and how to handle malpractice insurance as it pertains to working with contract attorneys.
MODERATED-Session 3 of 10 - Mr. Kornblum, a highly experienced trial and litigation lawyer for over ...
A practical overview designed for attorneys new to financial reporting. The session connects GAAP co...
MODERATED-Session 10 of 10 - Mr. Kornblum, a highly experienced trial and litigation lawyer for over...
MODERATED- I’m ok. I can work this out for myself. I’m not like a “real” ...
Synthetic identity fraud creates a significant legal and compliance challenge for professionals by c...
The direct examination presentation outlines how attorneys can elicit truthful, credible testimony w...
Cellphones represent one of the fastest-changing areas of legal practice. Mobile device evidence is ...
The statistics are compelling and clearly indicate that 1 out of 3 attorneys will likely have a need...
Part 1 of 2 - Lawyers at all levels of experience and even sophisticated law firms and general couns...
This Shakespeare?inspired program illustrates how Shakespearean technique can enrich courtroom advoc...