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- <text id=90TT1228>
- <title>
- May 14, 1990: A Question Of Money
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- May 14, 1990 Sakharov Memoirs
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- LAW, Page 76
- A Question Of Money
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Noriega's lawyers renew the debate over frozen fees
- </p>
- <p> The Panama Defense Forces could not save his regime in the
- face of a U.S. military assault. Now his high-powered legal
- defense team claims it may not be able to defend his case in
- the face of U.S. legal action. In a surprise move last week,
- General Manuel Noriega's lawyers asked to be excused from
- representing him against drug-trafficking charges in Miami.
- Reason: uncertain fees. Because of a sweeping U.S. Government
- freeze on the general's assets, estimated at $20 million to $60
- million, his lawyers maintained they could not be paid. Said
- defense attorney Steven Kollin: "I've been able to do very
- little because I need to travel and obtain a full-time staff
- of investigators. We've got warehouses of documents in Panama,
- but no one has been able to go down there and look at them."
- The prosecution promptly labeled the pleas of poverty
- "inaccurate and misleading." To try to break the impasse, U.S.
- District Judge William Hoeveler ordered the Government to
- detail exactly what it had seized.
- </p>
- <p> The imbroglio resurrected concerns among Noriega's
- supporters about his ability to get a fair trial in the U.S.
- But more important, it renewed some basic questions about the
- nation's sweeping forfeiture laws. Those statutes provide a
- mechanism for prosecutors in federal drug and racketeering
- cases to freeze any of a defendant's assets that they suspect
- to be fruits of the crime--even before obtaining a
- conviction. The targeted assets may include funds that could be
- used to pay an attorney. As a result, says University of
- Florida law professor Fletcher Baldwin, "federal prosecutors
- now have control not only over the defendant but also over the
- defendant's attorneys."
- </p>
- <p> It is the kind of control, say many experts, that has hit
- the defense bar in the solar plexus and left many in the
- profession reeling. In the past year the threat of forfeiture
- actions by the Government has forced many defense lawyers to
- diversify their practice and has even caused a few to bail out
- of big drug litigation. More important, it has plunged many
- attorneys into a sea of paper work to justify the source of
- their pay, pressuring some to avoid representing certain
- suspects and others to plea-bargain away their clients' cases.
- </p>
- <p> The crisis erupted last June when the U.S. Supreme Court
- upheld the Comprehensive Forfeiture Act of 1984. That law
- permits prosecutors to block a defendant's allegedly ill-got
- funds--including money that could be used to pay attorneys'
- fees--pending trial. In the event of a conviction, the assets
- are confiscated for good. The statute, which applies to drug
- and racketeering offenses, seeks to stop mobsters and drug
- kingpins from financing their defense with the fruits of their
- misdeeds. Another purpose, law-enforcement officials maintain,
- is to bar them from transferring large chunks of their assets
- to their lawyers for safekeeping.
- </p>
- <p> But as the Noriega flap illustrates, the law also has the
- potential of blocking the funds that suspects need to hire the
- attorneys of their choice. The measure, complains Neal Sonnett,
- president of the National Association of Criminal Defense
- Lawyers, "gives prosecutors the power to disqualify a Clarence
- Darrow while allowing a more pliable lawyer to remain in the
- case."
- </p>
- <p> Federal prosecutors insist they are merely using the law to
- seize dirty money from attorneys who ought to know better. But
- critics believe they see darker tactics at work. The feds
- "usually won't invoke forfeiture if you make a plea bargain,"
- observes Miami lawyer Joel Hirschhorn. "But the minute you
- plead not guilty, they threaten you with going after the fee."
- Noriega's lawyers argue that the freezing of his assets may be
- part of just such a plea-bargaining ploy. They say it is
- preposterous for prosecutors to claim that Noriega's money came
- only from drugs.
- </p>
- <p> The federal forfeiture laws have already changed the way
- many drug and racketeer defense lawyers do business. "If
- someone comes to hire me in a federal narcotics case, my first
- goal is to find out if the pay is legitimate," says Orlando
- attorney Cheney Mason. The forfeiture laws have also placed
- some practitioners on the defensive, quite literally. Since
- last year, Houston attorney Mike DeGeurin has been fighting the
- Justice Department over a subpoena to testify before a grand
- jury about the source of fees. The subpoena was served on him
- even before his client was indicted. The IRS is pressing
- criminal lawyers to reveal the identity of clients paying more
- than $10,000 in cash. To the dismay of the defense bar, earlier
- this year a federal judge in New York backed the IRS in this
- demand.
- </p>
- <p> Placing defense attorneys in an adversarial relationship
- with their clients over the origin of funds raises serious
- concerns. Warns Tulsa lawyer Allen Smallwood: "If I'm subject
- to spilling my guts about my client's secrets every time the
- U.S. Attorney taps me on the shoulder, it drives a wedge
- between me and my client." It drives a wedge, say many legal
- experts, that cracks a big hole in both the Sixth Amendment
- right to counsel and the attorney-client privilege of
- confidentiality.
- </p>
- <p> Prosecutors maintain that public defenders are available to
- replace private attorneys who dump clients with allegedly
- tainted funds. But critics note that public defenders, paid by
- taxpayers, are already swamped by the cases of the indigent.
- Moreover, says Noriega lawyer Kollin: "The Government picks the
- top of their crop to prosecute a defendant like Noriega. He
- deserves the same in his defense attorneys."
- </p>
- <p>By Alain L. Sanders. Reported by Jerome Cramer/Washington and
- Richard Woodbury/Houston.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-