Say Good-bye to the Attorney-Client Privilege
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
"If
the government had access to the communications between a client
and his lawyer, the lawyer would be nothing but a government agent,
like Soviet defense attorneys whose official role was to serve
as adjuncts to the prosecution."
~
Paul Craig Roberts & Lawrence M. Stratton
The
Tyranny of Good Intentions
Once
upon a time the US Department of Justice respected the legal rights
that make law a shield of the innocent rather than a weapon in the
hands of government. No more. What the great English jurist William
Blackstone called "the Rights of Englishmen" have been
eroded beyond recognition.
The
last remaining right the attorney-client privilege
is under full-scale assault by DOJ prosecutors in the tax shelter
case involving the accounting firm, KPMG. The Justice Department
has demanded, and the accounting firm has agreed, to waive the attorney-client
privilege for communications between lawyers and KPMG employees
involved in marketing tax shelters that the IRS has challenged.
The
attorney-client privilege was long championed by jurists because
they realized that the privilege promoted equality under the law.
Convictions can result from a lack of access to legal knowledge
as well as from actual wrongdoing. To ensure defendants would avail
themselves of legal counsel, their communications with attorneys
were made confidential, outside the reach of prosecutors.
In
recent years, the DOJ has taken the position that winning its cases
is more important than historic rights centuries in the making.
Arguing that the innocent have nothing to fear from their attorneys’
disclosures of their confidences, the DOJ has employed various means
of subverting the attorney-client privilege.
Sentencing
guidelines from the US Sentencing Commission, a commission appointed
by the White House, have greatly strengthened the ability of prosecutors
to attack the attorney-client privilege. Whether or not a company
is indicted and the severity of punishment depends on its "cooperation"
with the investigation.
A
January 2003 memo written by Deputy Attorney General Larry D. Thompson,
currently a fellow at the Brookings Institution in Washington, DC,
defines "cooperation" in a way that drives a wedge between
a company and its employees. A company that pays its employees’
legal fees is defined as uncooperative.
Faced
with the threat of being declared uncooperative, KPMG announced
that it would pay its employees legal fees only if they waived the
attorney-client privilege and "cooperated" with the investigation.
Invariably, "cooperation" requires self-incrimination
and negotiation of a guilty plea. By making it impossible for a
defendant to defend, the government never has to have a real case.
Americans
need to think seriously about the quality of "justice"
that is coming from the Justice Department. Prosecutors have defined
"cooperation" as aid in convicting oneself or a fellow
employee, as waiving all constitutional rights and privileges, as
betrayal of fellow employees, and as helping prosecutors create
the appearance of guilt even when no crime has been committed.
Among
the pending victims in the KPMG case, Jeffrey Eischeid faces 20
years in prison for marketing KPMG tax shelters that experts said
were legal.
The
IRS has the right to challenge the tax shelters, and the accounting
firm has stopped marketing them. But for the DOJ to retroactively
declare them illegal illustrates the precarious position of a defendant
today. Whatever he has done can be declared illegal after the fact.
The
DOJ has also disposed of the legal principle that there can be no
crime without intent. Neither Jeffrey Eischeid nor other KPMG employees
were knowingly or intentionally selling illegal tax shelters. The
products were approved by KPMG’s professional responsibility committee,
and the IRS’s challenge does not mean a crime was committed.
However,
DOJ prosecutors have become experts at creating the impression that
crimes have been committed. By stripping away a defendant's rights,
prosecutors have the power to coerce a guilty plea, crime or no
crime.
Conservatives
who prattle about Americans living under a rule of law are speaking
of a bygone era. The rule of law came to an end during the New Deal
when President Franklin Roosevelt turned Congressional statutes
into authorization bills for federal bureaucrats to legislate via
regulations.
Today
there is even less accountability. Appointed officials make criminal
law without even an authorization bill from Congress. The Sentencing
Commission’s "proposals" become law unless Congress vetoes
them. What we are witnessing is the emergence of a fascist legal
order in which law and legal procedure are whatever unelected officials
decide serves the interest of government.
How
else can we explain how the four foundations of our legal system
no retroactive law, no crime without intent, no self-incrimination,
and the attorney-client privilege have been swept aside in
the federal case against KPMG?
June
23, 2004
Dr.
Roberts [send him mail]
is John
M. Olin Fellow at the Institute for Political Economy and Research
Fellow at the Independent Institute. He is a former associate editor
of the Wall
Street Journal and a former assistant secretary of the U.S. Treasury.
He is the co-author of The
Tyranny of Good Intentions.
Copyright
© 2004 Creators Syndicate
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