The following document, submitted to CLE certifying authorities in over
      20 states, resulted in certification for both CLE and Ethics credits.
      
      
      Legal and Ethical Considerations for Attorneys
      By
      The Managing Partners of III, LLC
      To
      many who should know better, the skills of interviewing and elicitation
      are synonymous. In fact, they are in many ways extremes of one another.
      When interwoven properly, however, they are seamless and the adroit
      practitioner is capable of successfully moving back and forth between the
      two without the subject of an interview realizing it. Many professionals,
      failing to recognize the difference, approach these separate skills
      identically, failing to do either very well. The ability to be successful
      in gaining the truth, and seamless in the execution of the techniques,
      requires an in-depth understanding of both skills and significant practice
      in each.
       Unfortunately,
      many of those who are less than adept at doing so are in professions such
      as law, where the art of communication -- including interviewing and
      elicitation -- is supposedly a key skill. Just as unfortunate is the fact
      that few professional educational institutions, including law schools,
      provide any semblance of training in this critical area, leaving the
      student to learn from those whom they chose to emulate, or not learn at
      all. This haphazard learning process is neither effective or defendable.
      In
      the preamble to the American Bar Association's model for Rules of
      Professional Conduct (Model RPC), there are several key sentences and
      phrases that relate directly to the issues of ethical interviewing and
      ethical elicitation. The opening line reads, "A lawyer is a
      representative of clients, an officer of the legal system and a public
      citizen having special responsibility for the quality of justice." It
      later says, "As negotiator, a lawyer seeks a result advantageous to
      the client but consistent with requirements of honest dealing with
      others." Further on it directs that, "In all professional
      functions a lawyer should be competent, prompt, and diligent."
      Since
      interviewing and elicitation are critical skills for an attorney, this
      document mandates that he not only be proficient in the legal skills but
      also in his ability to interview and elicit, and just as importantly, he
      must do them in an honest, or ethical way. Ethics is the cornerstone of
      International Interviewing and Interrogation's (III) Behavior Assessment
      and Ethical Elicitation Course for Attorneys. Our training provides an
      effective and ethical methodology for gathering the most accurate and
      factual information possible, whether it is in an interview, an
      elicitation, or a combination of the two. The course also makes clear to
      the participant what the differences are and the distinct approach to
      each. Unethical conduct in garnering information from participants in the
      legal system is not uncommon.
      As
      officers of the court and legal representatives of clients, a binding
      obligation, both legally and ethically, to help the court seek the truth,
      is assumed by all attorneys. In their frustration from attempting to get
      at the truth or assist their client, attorneys, at times, resort to
      unethical or unacceptable practices in the eyes of both the court and the
      ABA. Such practices as coercive manipulation, overt threats, and/or bad
      faith promises subvert the legal system and violate professional standards
      of conduct.
      This
      course is designed to help those who strive to be ethical improve their
      skills and enable them to serve their clients and the judicial system more
      effectively. Lawyers traditionally receive no formal or comprehensive
      training in proper interviewing techniques or the effective elicitation of
      the truth. The closest most come are in direct and cross examinations in
      law school moot court. In the former, student attorneys are merely
      following a script prepared by themselves and the witness designed to
      provide information to the court in a light most favorable to their side
      of this adversarial hearing. In the latter, they are seeking to discredit
      or confuse the witness, or at least make the witness appear less credible
      to the judge and/or jury. In either case, these are artificial situations
      that ill prepare an attorney for an effective one on one interview or
      elicitation designed to determine the truth prior to a court proceeding.
      For too many, though, these are the only skill building exercises they
      receive in this area. After graduation, they attempt to modify these
      techniques and apply them as they begin to interview clients, prospective
      witnesses, and experts in the "real world." This practice is
      akin to doctors learning to operate on frogs in medical school, then
      modifying the procedure to humans after they graduate.
      While
      this may be an extreme analogy, the results translate the same way -- they
      can be disastrous. To compound the problem, because the combination of
      effective interviewing and elicitation skills are so rare, the lack of
      them routinely goes unnoticed because there is no correct model with which
      to compare. To offset this void, III's training course provides the
      student with the learned skills to identify deceptive and/or unethical
      behavior. The training then teaches the attorney to effectively and
      ethically elicit information during the normal course of their everyday
      practice or at any point in the legal and/or judicial process.
      Both
      the training and learned skills emanating from our course are consistent
      with the canons of ethics in the practice of law. Specifically, III's
      training identifies those practices that extend beyond ethical boundaries,
      demonstrating pitfalls to avoid. As noted in the Model RPC Scope section,
      "The Rules of Professional Conduct are rules of reasonÖThe Rules
      simply provide a framework for the ethical practice of law." We will
      do the same with ethical interviewing and ethical elicitation -- provide a
      framework to perform both effectively and ethically.  In the training
      segment on Ethical Interviewing, the attorney is given a framework and a
      strategy for conducting proper and ethical interviews. This offers an
      effective and methodical approach beyond the common, often quoted, and
      inadequate instructions to "just gather the who, what, when, where,
      how, and why."
      If
      the interviewer fails to have a strategy and a goal going into an
      interview, he will frequently miss what should be obvious follow-up
      questions that can change the entire focus of the interview. While no one
      ever believes this can happen to them, it is an all too frequent
      occurrence, even with experienced interviewers. The sad part is that the
      interviewer will leave the session not  realizing his failure.
      One
      highly publicized failing will be vividly demonstrated during the segment
      of the course which analyzes the O. J. Simpson interview conducted by LAPD
      homicide detectives. Also included in the ethical interviewing segment is
      a discussion on the proper use of different types of questions and how the
      improper use of some of them may create a case for unethical behavior on
      the part of an attorney. A simple example is the improper use of a
      negative question. When certain negative questions are posed by counsel to
      a criminal defendant who is clearly guilty, they could easily be construed
      as encouragement or even instructions for the client to commit perjury if
      he ultimately testifies, e.g., "You didn't rob that store, did
      you?" Another example is the simple, "You've never committed a
      crime, have you?" asked of a potential witness. These questions
      demonstratively indicate to the recipient that the interviewer expects a
      negative answer, not necessarily a truthful one. In the first example,
      when an affirmative answer is clearly the truthful one and both parties
      know it, it could be interpreted as instructions, rather than a legitimate
      question. If the attorney consciously asks the question this way on
      purpose, then he must be prepared to deal with any consequences which
      arise from it. In the second example, it may also be taken as
      instructions, not only causing potential perjury later on, but also
      embarrassment when the opposition has done a better job of preparation and
      the truth comes out.
      Unfortunately,
      many interviewers don't realize the impact this type of  question has
      on the response of the interviewee, or if they do, aren't cognizant of how
      often and under what circumstances they use it, thus unknowingly opening
      themselves to questions of unethical conduct, in addition to making their
      interview ineffective. Either way, the attorney is not ethically or
      effectively representing his client. For the times when a more adversarial
      role is indicated, this course teaches how best to effectively reach
      bottom-line truth through an ethical elicitation. In representing a
      client's best interest within the framework of the legal system, it is an
      ethical imperative that the attorney effectively obtain all pertinent
      information which is factually accurate from the client and witnesses
      alike.
      While
      in criminal cases a defense attorney may not wish to know the
      "truth" from a client for fear of later running afoul of other
      ethical rules, in civil matters it is imperative to be operating with the
      truth to effectively and ethically represent the client. When attorneys
      are attempting to elicit the truth from a reluctant interviewee (defined
      as anyone who wishes to withhold or slant the truth), it is easy to resort
      to the methods used in cross examinations. When done outside the
      courtroom, however, without the constraints of an opposing attorney or the
      trial judge, it is easy to push past the limits of propriety, chancing a
      violation of the Model RPC Rule 4.4 - Respect for Rights of Third Persons,
      which states, "In representing a client, a lawyer shall not: (a) use
      means that have no substantial purpose other than to embarrass, delay, or
      burden a third personÖ(b) use methods of obtaining evidence that violate
      the legal rights of such a personÖ" Not only is this conduct
      unethical, it is seldom effective.
      Sadly,
      television shows and the occasionally highly publicized abuses by police
      have given the word interrogation a bad name. The truth is, though, that
      there are many people involved as clients and witnesses in various legal
      proceedings who, for their own reasons, are not inclined to tell the
      truth. While the perception of the public may be that these untruthful
      persons are mostly criminal defendants, nothing could be further from the
      truth. Given the right circumstances, everyone lies if they believe it is
      in their best interest. The only way to persuade them to provide factual
      information is to convince them that it is in their best interest to do
      so. While this may sound like a simplistic view, few professionals have
      the proper training to attempt elicitation in a methodical and ethical way
      that significantly enhances their chances for success.
      Recipients
      of III's training will come away from the course far better equipped to
      accomplish the critical goal of obtaining the truth from a reluctant
      person in an ethical manner. It is easy to recognize and acknowledge that
      the skills of interviewing and elicitation are critical to the successful
      practice of law. Too often these skills are mistakenly taken for granted
      and just as often, shortcomings in these skills are not recognized by
      others who may otherwise be in a position to detect and correct
      deficiencies. This leads to many of the stereotypical approaches to
      "interrogation" which are outlined in the article by the
      "Legion of Doom" hackers that is contained in section six of
      III's student manual, and the resultant passing of these improper
      techniques to yet another generation of otherwise enlightened
      professionals.
      III
      hopes to stem the perpetuation of these misguided and ineffective methods
      by providing a legal, ethical, and highly effective methodology of
      obtaining the truth while respecting the dignity of the person being
      interviewed, in keeping with the letter, the spirit, and the intent of the
      ABA model for Rules of Professional Conduct.
      Give
      us a call or write for more information
      (703)
      860-1535
      Send
      mail to III, LLC