Page 12 - November PPIAC Newsletter Published
P. 12

GUEST POST

                                               ARE YOU CONFLICTED?


                                               by Sam Petitto


                                               I work mostly for attorneys, whom I call my clients.
                                               They call their clients defendants, plaintiffs, or respondents. While I have a
                                               basic CRM system in place for customer relations management, I also have
                                               a second and equally important list. It’s a list of people I began keeping
                                               almost five years ago and it has saved me time, money, and reputation more
                                               than once: a conflict list.

                                               That list includes the names of the attorneys’ clients and every other citizen
                                               involved in a case on which I work. It also includes their status as defendant,
                                               codefendant, witness, plaintiff, respondent, relative, or target of surveillance.
                                               As the list has grown and evolved, I’ve added case numbers, birthdays,
                                               phone numbers, names of attorneys who represented the person, and case
                                               outcomes.

                                               In 2020, when an attorney wants to hire me, the first thing I ask is the names
                                               of the defendant and codefendants in a criminal case, or the names of the
                                               plaintiff and respondent in a civil case. It’s easy to search the list, which is
                                               now a spreadsheet with almost 1,000 names.

                                               Occasionally, I’m offered work helping represent someone who is a
                                               codefendant in a case where I’m already assigned to work on behalf of
                                               another codefendant. Those cases I simply decline. Simply checking docket
                                               numbers doesn’t help, though, since each codefendant gets a unique case
                                               number. 12 people arrested for distribution of meth means 12 unique case
                                               numbers, and not always numbered consecutively. A list of names is crucial
                                               for sorting it out quickly.

                                               More often, I’ll check the name of a prospective defendant and find that
                                               person is a past witness or victim in a previous case I worked. When that
                                               happens, I let the attorney know and allow them to decide if there’s an
                                               ethical conflict with me helping represent their defendant. Often, even if the
                                               name is someone I’ve dealt with previously, I can still take the case as long
                                               as the attorney deems there is no conflict.
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