
“Lawyers Can Drop Uncooperative Clients, Within Limits, ABA Says” —
- “Lawyers can stop providing services or seek permission to do so if a client doesn’t fulfill basic obligations in the attorney-client relationship, the American Bar Association said in a new ethics opinion.”
- “This option, under Rule 1.16(b)(5), is most commonly invoked when a client repeatedly fails to pay for legal services, the ABA noted in its Wednesday opinion. However, the rule can also be applied to clients who refuse to cooperate with their attorney, provide or update their contact information, or comply with other terms of an engagement agreement, the ABA said.”
- “This is true even in circumstances where withdrawing representation would inflict a material adverse effect on the client, the ABA said, with the caveat that attorneys must give their client ‘reasonable warning that the lawyer will withdraw unless the obligation is fulfilled’ before they can abandon their client.”
- “‘In addition to serving as a risk management tool for the lawyer and law firm, engagement agreements should provide the client with a meaningful understanding of the material terms of the relationship,’ the association said. ‘This Opinion focuses specifically on provisions concerning the client’s obligations.’”
- “The opinion lays out several limitations an attorney must consider when drafting engagement agreements.”
- “For example, engagement agreements can stipulate provisions that the Model Rules of Professional Conduct don’t require, such as more implicit client obligations like producing necessary documents and providing truthful information.”
- “An agreement could also have terms that are ‘not otherwise implicit’ as long as they’re ‘within ethical limits,’ the ABA said, including provisions that prohibit a client from recording conversations or disclosing the attorney’s identity on social media over the course of representation.”
- “Client agreements can’t be used to require clients to comply with terms prohibited under the Model Rules or other public policy, such as forcing a client to ‘promise not to later pursue a disciplinary complaint or bar grievance against the lawyer or law firm.’.”
- “The opinion emphasizes that attorneys must enforce engagement agreements that are accurate or not misleading to the client; the ABA bars agreements that mischaracterize the client’s prospective rights and obligations, in addition to the circumstances in which attorneys can withdraw representation.”
- “Agreements also can’t include ‘a blanket stipulation irrevocably consenting to the lawyer’s future withdrawal’ in circumstances when an attorney wishes to withdraw for a reason not specified and agreed to by the client, the opinion said.”
David Kluft asks: “Should defense counsel be disqualified if she knows the medical history of a prosecution witness?” —
- “A NJ man was on trial for murder. The prosecution planned to call the man’s cellmate to testify that the man had admitted the murder to him. The problem was that defense counsel briefly represented the cellmate years before, and during that time had access to his mental health records, which among other things discussed his battle with schizophrenia.”
- “The prosecution moved to disqualify her. The Court allowed the motion, finding that defense counsel’s familiarity with the medical records of the cellmate and the very serious mental health issues detailed therein would be ‘part of the calculus’ in any attack on his credibility, and that this required her disqualification.”
- “The NJ App. Division affirmed, noting in passing that the two matters were ‘substantially related’ for conflict purposes, presumably because they both involved the mental health of the cellmate. According to the court, there was a substantial risk that defense counsel would either have (a) used the confidential information from the former client (the cellmate), thus giving an unfair advantage to the defendant; or (b) failed to vigorously cross-examine the witness about his mental health for fear of using the confidential information. Either way, the Court agreed it was appropriate to disqualify her.”
- Decision: here.
“Law firm Wiley Rein hit with class action over data breach tied to Chinese hackers” —
- “Prominent U.S. law firm Wiley Rein has been sued in a proposed class action alleging the firm failed to protect sensitive personal data stolen by hackers believed to be affiliated with the Chinese government. The lawsuit was filed on Friday in the federal court in Washington by a Florida resident and seeks class-action status for potentially thousands of people.”
- “The complaint alleges that cybercriminals accessed Microsoft 365 email accounts belonging to certain Wiley Rein personnel between July 2024 and June 2025 before the firm detected the intrusion last year. The stolen data allegedly includes names, addresses, dates of birth, financial account numbers, medical information, and full or partial Social Security numbers, according to the lawsuit. The firm did not begin notifying victims until on or around March 6, 2026, the complaint said.”
- “Wiley Rein acknowledged after an internal probe that ‘a group that may be affiliated with the Chinese government’ carried out the intrusion, according to the lawsuit. In a notice to at least one victim, Wiley Rein said that the firm was arranging for the person to have 12 months of complimentary credit monitoring, and that it had ‘taken additional steps to enhance our existing security measures.’”
- “Law firms, like other major U.S. businesses, have faced a wave of cyberattacks in recent years. Law firms are particularly attractive targets for sophisticated criminal and state-linked hackers drawn to the vast troves of sensitive client data they hold.”
- “The complaint alleges the breach occurred through a so-called phishing email, and that Wiley Rein failed to implement basic cybersecurity safeguards, including multi-factor authentication and adequate staff training.”
“‘Wiley Rein’s breach differs from typical data breaches because it affects consumers who had no relationship with Wiley Rein, never sought one, and never consented to Wiley Rein collecting and storing their information,’ the lawsuit said.

