Here's a summary of an interesting legal ethics case out of Delaware involving litigation misconduct.
And here's a new and provocatively titled article from co-blogger Anita Bernstein called, Sanctioning the Ambulance Chaser. The article raises issues that are addressed to some degree in the comments to this post from last week. Here's Anita's abstract:
Most scholars of professional responsibility who have written about the ban on solicitation of new clients want to see the prohibition liberalized. This Article offers empirical support for the near-consensus by exploring the two contrary meanings of "sanction." Sanction in the sense of punishment exists in state codes of professional responsibility: Almost every United States jurisdiction deems solicitation a disciplinary offense. The record, however, reveals sanctioning in the sense of condoning. My effort to count every instance of attorney discipline for solicitation reported to the public during 2002-2007 located very few in relation to the 1.3 million licenses held to practice law. The number is apparently only 61, and I argue that, properly understood, this count is much lower - perhaps as low as 1. Purporting to declare a behavior punishable while at the same time permitting it to go on without punishment is a state of hypocrisy that the bar ought to abandon.