Privilege
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Privilege
Can the Privilege Protect Documents Prepared by Someone Who Has Never Hired a Lawyer?
The attorney-client privilege protects communications between clients and their lawyers. But in certain admittedly limited circumstances, the protection can apply to documents created by someone who has not yet hired a lawyer.
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Three Subject Matter Waiver Decisions Send Mixed Signals: Part III
Under general common law doctrine and Federal Rule of Evidence 502, courts normally hold that disclosing privileged communications only triggers a subject matter waiver if the disclosure seeks some advantage in court. But some courts find a subject matter waiver in broader circumstances.
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Three Subject Matter Waiver Decisions Send Mixed Signals: Part II
In his previous Privilege Point, McGuireWoods partner Thomas Spahn described a decision applying the subject matter waiver doctrine, which relies on fairness notions to prevent litigants from relying on privileged communications as a "sword" while simultaneously using the privilege as a "shield." Here, he picks up where he left off.
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