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PEOPLE V. LYNNE STEWART, ET AL, PART III
Posted on November 23rd, 2009 2 commentsThis is the final post in a series on the Second Circuit affirmation of the the conviction of Lynne Stewart, Mohammed Yousry, and Ahmed Abdel Sattar for defrauding the government by violating the SAMs for Sheikh Omar Ahmad Ali Abdel Rahman. We began the series on Thursday with a discussion of the appellate court discussion of the sentencing of Lynne Stewart. On Saturday we looked at other issues that were on appeal. Today we will look at some of policy issues involved.
A lawyer has a duty to zealously represent his/her client. The rule is found in the ABA Rules of Professional Conduct. Clients who are in jail or prison are extremely isolated. Often they are unable to call or writes their friends, family, and colleagues. Part of the lawyer’s job therefore is to facilitate communications with people outside. This may involve everything from finding witness to calling a spouse or significant other with the message that the client loves him or her. The government and the courts believe that this is a special case due to the SAMs placed on Stewart’s client, Sheikh Omar Ahmad Ali Abdel Rahman. The SAMs, (Special Administrative Measures) limited Rahman’s ability to communicate with the outside world while he was in prison. In other words if the government thinks your client is a reprehensible terrorist you are not supposed to give him/her the zealous representation that the Code of Professional Conduct and state law demands.
As Lynne Stewart pointed out on Democracy Now the government violated her client’s Sixth Amendment right by videotaping her confidential attorney client conversation with him and by searching her office for documents related to Rahman. The latter, being of course, also a violation of Stewart’s Fourth Amendment rights. But the Justice Department, under John Ashcroft, would take whatever steps it felt necessary to convict Stewart and to intimidate other attorneys who are providing the zealous defense that the Constitution demands.
Furthermore by convicting Stewart’s interpreter and paralegal the government is sending a clear message to those who work for attorneys representing “dangerous” client that they too may end up in prison. It is one thing to go after the lawyer who has a professional duty to zealously represent their client but to go after the attorney’s staff is another issue. Most criminal defense attorneys feel a professional duty to zealously represent their clients and will do so regardless of the danger of government prosecution but interpreters and paralegals have no such professional duty and can choose not to work with attorneys on difficult cases. Yet without interpreters and paralegals attorneys are unable to give clients the effective representation they deserve.
Fourth Amendment, Sixth Amendment, terrorism Ahmed Abdel Sattar, American Bar Association Rules of Professional Conduct, Fourth Amendment, John Ashcroft, Lynne Stewart, Mohammed Yousry, SAMs, Sheikh Omar Ahmad Ali Abdel Rahman, Sixth Amendment, Special Administrative Measures 2 Comments »2 Responses to “PEOPLE V. LYNNE STEWART, ET AL, PART III”
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Roselyn Selke August 30th, 2010 at 4:58 am
I understand that but where does it take us?
Things are more like they are now than they ever were before.
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Who knows what happens next… All I know is:
Girl, u better have a license coz u r drivin me crazy.
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