The federal government is no friend to the attorney-client privilege. That's just simply a fact. Perhaps no other factor lately has applied greater pressure on the privilege than the government's practice of insisting on waiver of the privilege as an indication of cooperation.
Voluntary Waiver At The Barrel Of A Gun
The federal government is no friend to the attorney-client privilege. That's just simply a fact. Perhaps no other factor lately has applied greater pressure on the privilege than the government's practice of insisting on waiver of the privilege as an indication of cooperation. Certainly other agencies have gotten into the act, but the Justice Department and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) lead the charge in requiring corporate investigation targets to sacrifice confidentiality for the benefits of cooperation. <br>But for the corporate target, the immediate and practical implications of a government-demanded waiver are serious. A party's decision to waive the privilege can have significant consequences, not the least of which may be the inability to assert the privilege in downstream or parallel litigation that so often accompanies a government investigation.
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