DOJ-OGR-00021330.jpg
876 KB
Extraction Summary
7
People
1
Organizations
2
Locations
0
Events
2
Relationships
8
Quotes
Document Information
Type:
Legal document
File Size:
876 KB
Summary
This document is a page from a legal filing, specifically from case 1:20-cr-00330-AJN, filed on April 16, 2021. It outlines several of the Florida Bar’s Rules of Professional Conduct (FRPC) that are applicable to attorneys practicing before the court. The page details the rules for Competence (FRPC 4-1.1), Diligence (FRPC 4-1.3), and Candor in Dealing with Others (FRPC 4-4.1), providing explanations and context from the official comments to these rules.
People (7)
| Name | Role | Context |
|---|---|---|
| lawyer | Legal Professional |
Mentioned throughout as the subject of professional conduct rules regarding competence, diligence, and candor.
|
| client | Recipient of Legal Services |
Mentioned as the party a lawyer represents and owes duties of competence and diligence to.
|
| general practitioner | Type of Lawyer |
Mentioned as a baseline for required proficiency in many instances.
|
| government attorneys | Government Lawyer |
Mentioned in a footnote as being subject to state laws and court rules.
|
| federal prosecutor | Government Lawyer |
Mentioned in a footnote as representing the people of the United States rather than an individual client.
|
| U.S. Attorney | Government Lawyer |
Mentioned in a footnote citation regarding duties.
|
| Attorney General | Government Official |
Mentioned in a footnote citation as representing the United States in legal matters.
|
Organizations (1)
| Name | Type | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Florida Bar | Professional Association |
Mentioned as the source of the Rules of Professional Conduct (FRPC) that attorneys practicing before the court are su...
|
Locations (2)
| Location | Context |
|---|---|
|
Implicitly mentioned through the 'Florida Bar's Rules of Professional Conduct'.
|
|
|
Mentioned in footnotes as the entity represented by the federal prosecutor and the Attorney General.
|
Relationships (2)
The document outlines the lawyer's duties of competence (FRPC 4-1.1), diligence (FRPC 4-1.3), and candor (FRPC 4-4.1) owed to or in the course of representing a client.
A footnote states that the federal prosecutor's 'client' is not an individual but rather the people of the United States.
Key Quotes (8)
"the relative complexity and specialized nature of the matter, the lawyer’s general experience, the lawyer’s training and experience in the field in question, the preparation and study the lawyer is able to give the matter, and whether it is feasible to refer the matter to, or associate or consult with, a lawyer of established competence in the field."Source
— Comment to FRPC 4-1.1
(Listing factors relevant to determining a lawyer's competence.)
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Quote #1
"[i]n many instances the required proficiency is that of a general practitioner."Source
— Comment to FRPC 4-1.1
(Describing the standard of competence required.)
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Quote #2
"[t]he required attention and preparation are determined in part by what is at stake; major litigation and complex transactions ordinarily require more extensive treatment than matters of lesser complexity and consequence."Source
— Comment to Rule 4-1.1
(Explaining how the stakes of a matter affect the required level of competence.)
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Quote #3
"A lawyer should pursue a matter on behalf of a client despite opposition, obstruction, or personal inconvenience to the lawyer and take whatever lawful and ethical measures are required to vindicate a client’s cause or endeavor."Source
— Comment to FRPC 4-1.3
(Explaining the duty of diligence.)
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Quote #4
"zeal"Source
— Comment to FRPC 4-1.3
(Describing the required level of advocacy for a client.)
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Quote #5
"to press for every advantage that might be realized for a client."Source
— Comment to FRPC 4-1.3
(Stating what a lawyer is not required to do, despite the duty of zealous advocacy.)
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Quote #6
"[m]isrepresentations can also occur by partially true but misleading statements or omissions that are the equivalent of affirmative false statements,"Source
— Comment to FRPC 4-4.1
(Explaining what constitutes a misrepresentation under the rule of candor.)
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Quote #7
"[w]hether a particular statement should be regarded as one of fact can depend on the circumstances."Source
— Comment to FRPC 4-4.1
(Clarifying how to determine if a statement is one of fact.)
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Quote #8
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