They wouldn't threaten to quit if you were a nice person who insisted on testing the limits of the law? You don't sound like a person with much experience.
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How would the client know if something was illegal if the client didn’t ask? Happens fairly routinely in my experience when corporate client isn’t in-house counsel.
End of conversation
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"I realize that I might be obstructing justice, but let's test the limits of the law" is not an exciting new legal strategy in any context. It isn't a keen new high-risk plan for innovation, it's asking your lawyer to violate the ethical code. This is a dullard's argument.
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You think those kinds of clients have the money and taste for risk that larger outfits don't? Small clients may have less experienced and less creative attorneys. Generally huge difference between testing law and asking for illegality. Now experience = anecdote, < supposition?
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