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Client Games: Defense Attorney Perspectives on Their Relations with Criminal Clients
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 November 2018
Abstract
In this study, relations between criminal defense lawyers and their clients are explored from the attorneys' perspective using interviews with 155 defense counsel from nine felony trial courts. Attorneys claim public clients are more skeptical and less willing to accept their professional authority than private clients and that they need to take extra steps to gain their cooperation. The accountability of attorneys is investigated in relationship to the need to establish “client control.” This problem is resolved through a gamelike situation leading to the apparent paradox that attorneys share decision-making power with public clients contrary to their expectations.
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- Copyright © American Bar Foundation, 1986
References
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28 See id. regarding trial penalties in these courts. For other analyses, see Thomas M. Uhlman & N. Darlene Walker, He Takes Some of My Time: I Take Some of His: An Analysis of Sentencing Patterns in Jury Cases, 14 Law & Soc'y Rev. 323 (1980); David Brereton & Jonathan D. Casper, Does It Pay to Plead Guilty? Differential Sentencing and the Functioning of Criminal Courts, 16 Law & Soc'y Rev. 45 (1981–82).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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30 See text accompanying note 21.Google Scholar
31 Rosenthal, supra note 4, at 13.Google Scholar
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