Current Legal Ethical Issues
with Professor Stephen Gillers

Monday, April 23, 2018 | 6:00 pm – 8:15 pm

Program Instructor

Stephen Gillers
Elihu Root Professor of Law 
New York University School of Law

  • No matter your practice area or whether or not you have previously attended, you won’t want to miss this program. Join us to hear this nationally renowned professor and ethicist address current issues of legal ethics. Programs typically feature distinct topics which are chosen close in time to the event to maximize topicality. The topics are geared to an audience of diverse interests. Audience questions and comments are encouraged.

    This program will not be taped. You will only have the chance to see it – LIVE!

    Live Program: $249 Member | $349 Nonmember

     

  • Stephen Gillers is Elihu Root Professor of Law at New York University School of Law, where he has taught since 1978 and served as Vice Dean from 1999 to 2004. He has written widely on legal ethics and has spoken at hundreds of events in the U.S. and abroad.  He is the author of Regulation of Lawyers: Problems of Law and Ethics first published in 1985 and now in its 10th edition.

    From 2000-2002, Professor Gillers was a member of the ABA’s Multijurisdictional Practice Commission. In 2010-2013, he was a member of the ABA’s 20/20 Commission. In 2011, he received the Michael Franck Award from the ABA’s Center for Professional Responsibility. In 2015, he received the American Bar Foundation’s Outstanding Scholar Award.

    Professor Gillers’ recent scholarship includes “Guns, Fruit, Drugs, and Documents: A Criminal Defense Lawyer’s Responsibility for Real Evidence,” 63 Stan. L. Rev. 813 (2011); “A Profession, If You Can Keep It: How Information Technology and Fading Borders Are Reshaping the Law Marketplace and What We Should Do About It,” 63 Hastings L. J. 953 (2012); “How To Make Rules for Lawyers: The Professional Responsibility of the Legal Profession,” 40 Pepperdine L. Rev. 365 (2013)(Symposium issue on The Lawyer of the Future); “Lowering the Bar: How Lawyer Discipline in New York Fails to Protect the Public,” 17 J. Legis. & Public Policy 485 (2014); and “A Tendency to Deprave and Corrupt: The Transformation of American Obscenity Law from Hicklin to Ulysses II, 85 Wash. L. Rev. 215 (2007).

     

  • 6:00 pm – 6:10 pm Introduction
    6:10 pm – 6:25 pm John Dowd Decides (NOT)

    • And dealing with a difficult client generally
    6:25 pm – 6:40 pm The diGenova/Toensing Conflict and the Client They Lost
    6:40 pm – 7:00 pm A Refresher on the Brady Obligation and the Separate Ethical Disclosure Duty
    7:00 pm – 7:10 pm The Uber Deputy GC: Discovery Games?
    7:10 pm – 7:25 pm A Firm Policy for its (Young) Lawyers on Social Media
    7:25 pm – 7:45 pm Are You As Ethically Sharp as a 2L? Take the Quiz
    7:45 pm – 8:15 pm Q&A

     

  • CLE Credit
    NY:
     2.5 ethics
    NJ: 2.5 professional responsibility
    CA: 2.5 professional responsibility
    PA: 2.0 professional responsibility

     

  • Sponsorship Opportunities are Available! Please Contact:
    Maricela Alfonso, Membership and CLE Relations Associate  | (212) 382-6608 | MAlfonso@nycbar.org

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