Washgrizfan1 said:
Jerry Punch said:
Criminal defense cannot be taken on a contingency basis, no exceptions. If it is a civil suit that's a different matter because ultimately the burden is on the attorney to make good business decisions and take cases that have a chance of being winners. The status of the athlete at that point would mean much less, because regardless of volleyball or football, the athlete would be judged on the merits of the case and the lawyer would still have the burden.
The law firm said, according to the report, said: "she was also representing the student-athlete on a contingency fee basis in a potential civil lawsuit against the local police department and reported that she repesented the student-athlete in the related criminal case without charge in consideration for him retaining her to represent him in his potential civil suit." The law firm also said they were using the criminal case to evaluate and set up the potential civil case. I am told by lawyer friends that it would not be uncommon for law firms not to charge for the criminal part of a matter is they were looking at or planning a later civil case on a contingency fee basis.
Those are two separate cases though - one a civil rights violation and another criminal defense. One would be taken on contingency and the other would be hourly. Combining the two for billing purposes is unethical and requires a major assumption:
1) Contingency fee recovered in civil case and pays to client the remainder. Whatever left over is presumably paid back to the attorney to cover hourly charge in criminal case.
2) Contingency fee not recovered because civil case either produces too little cash or is not won at all. Nothing refunded to client, nothing paid to attorney, and hourly charge in criminal case is still outstanding.
So, they are counting big time on recovering at least enough in the civil case to cover the criminal charges. That's a big gamble to take. At the end of the day, the criminal fee would still have to be documented on an hourly basis so as not to subject the firm to scrutiny by a state bar. A lawyer can and should have a vested interested in the outcome of a criminal case, but not a financial interest. To ensure objectivity and equal representation, they should be paid regardless of whether they win or lose.
These aren't the issues that affected UM athletes. Some football players got discounted legal fees. On the free market, it isn't likely that any one else would be able to accomplish that. Because of their status as football players, they got better access and discounted access to the legal system. That's the core of the problem, whether or not we get bogged down in a contingency versus hourly fee schedule.