Called attorney-client privilege in the legal context, or in religious contexts, confession secret (as for the priests during the sacrament of confession).
I have known penal lawyers (that is attorneys that are specialized in criminal procedure) that have had knowledge (and evidence) that their own client was an assassin. A murderer.
This attorney secretly shipped all the evidence to the prosecutor, who could find further evidence which could be used in court.
So the suspect, and later the defendant received a life sentence.
The lawyer renounced the defense, (that is, he resigned), so he didn't violate any attorney-client privilege.
What do you think? Do you agree that sometimes this secret is supposed to be violated in order to make Justice triumph?
I have known penal lawyers (that is attorneys that are specialized in criminal procedure) that have had knowledge (and evidence) that their own client was an assassin. A murderer.
This attorney secretly shipped all the evidence to the prosecutor, who could find further evidence which could be used in court.
So the suspect, and later the defendant received a life sentence.
The lawyer renounced the defense, (that is, he resigned), so he didn't violate any attorney-client privilege.
What do you think? Do you agree that sometimes this secret is supposed to be violated in order to make Justice triumph?
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