ER 3.1 Meritorious Claims and Contentions

    The Standard

    A lawyer who is participating or has participated in the investigation or litigation of a matter shall not make an extrajudicial statement that the lawyer knows or reasonably should know will be disseminated by means of public communication and will have a substantial likelihood of materially prejudicing an adjudicative proceeding in the matter.

    The Limitation

    The ethical rule covering trial publicity, ER 3.6, is not the most common basis for an ethical charge, but it places critical constraints on attorneys considering whether to publicly comment on their pending cases. In a disciplinary matter, the conduct at issue might be easy to prove (e.g., the lawyer appeared on CNN or posted written comments about a case on the lawyer’s blog or social media account), but whether the lawyer’s statements might prejudice the eventual trial or might be protected by the First Amendment are thorny and complicated issues. When in doubt, the safest course is not to comment publicly on your cases. If instead you decide that commenting publicly would serve your client’s interests, remember that you likely need your client’s or employer’s consent before doing so.

    FAQs

    To what kind of statements does the rule apply?
    Does the rule let you make any statements about a pending proceeding?
    Does ER 3.6 trump a judge’s gag order or standing order?
    Does the rule allow you to publicly defend your client against negative publicity?
    Can my partners or other attorneys in my firm or office commit publicly on the matter even though I, as the assigned lawyer, cannot?
    I am a prosecutor; does this rule apply to me?
    I thought all “information relating to the representation” is confidential under the ethical rules; how could I comment publicly on a pretrial or trial matter?
    The media outlets often contact me to comment on notorious cases in the community, and these are cases that I have not worked on as a lawyer. What if anything can I say?
    So long as I follow ER 3.6, will I not violate the ethical rules or anger my law office or client?
    Can I write a book about a noteworthy trial I handled?
    With respect to what kinds of trials should I be most circumspect about making public statements?
    Does this rule apply only to my statements to the news?
    This page is managed by Patricia Seguin