Trump will be pissed (pee tape is real)

You find a convicted and disbarred attorney who breached the following agency duties owed to his client:

Agent's duties include: to
(1) act on behalf of and be subject to the control of the principal,
(2) act within the scope of authority or power delegated by the principal,
(3) discharge his or her duties with appropriate care and diligence,
(4) avoid conflict between his or her personal interests and those of the principal
(5) promptly hand over to the principal all monies collected on principal's behalf.

Read more: http://www.businessdictionary.com/definition/duties-of-agent-and-principal.html

To be credible?


He did not breach any duty unless the information is true so you admit it is true then...

If a client tells an attorney he hid money in his mattress from the IRS and then the attorney tells the public his client repeatedly runs stop signs there is no breach of agency duties, the attorney is just lying.....
 
He did not breach any duty unless the information is true so you admit it is true then...

If a client tells an attorney he hid money in his mattress from the IRS and then the attorney tells the public his client repeatedly runs stop signs there is no breach of agency duties, the attorney is just lying.....

Note my edited post.
 
[QUOTE="exGOPer, post: 5178726, member: 327981"

Trump will be first dragged out of WH and then thrown into prison like the born criminal he is.[/QUOTE]
No-------No he won't and No-----No he isn't.
 
Also, an attorney can breach confidentiality...the punishment is from the ABA and this guy dont really care what ABA has to say.

Also Mikey was involved in the crimes so...

The attorney-client privilege protects most communications between clients and their lawyers. But, according to the crime-fraud exception to the privilege, a client’s communication to her attorney isn’t privileged if she made it with the intention of committing or covering up a crime or fraud.

Because the attorney-client privilege belongs to the client, the client’s intent determines whether the exception applies. Most courts will apply the exception even if the attorney had no knowledge of, and didn’t participate in, the actual crime or fraud.

The crime-fraud exception applies if:

  • the client was in the process of committing or intended to commit a crime or fraudulent act, and
  • the client communicated with the lawyer with intent to further the crime or fraud, or to cover it up
 
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