sock puppet wrote:I see quite a significant distinction. For example...
So you think a good counter-example is a hypothetical about the liability of a school
district when a teacher employed by a school within the district commits a crime? Not the school, but the district.
That comparison doesn't even come close to the example I offered regarding Bob Crockett claiming to be legal counsel to my step-dad because Kurt Van Gordon sued the Church and the late FARMS review over something he wrote.
How about a different one? This is all hypothetical of course: How about a Mormon boarding school which has a history of physical abuse, torture, humiliation, sexual abuse, crimes against children, DHS code standards violations, etc. that gets sued for sexually abusing young boys. I imagine that the lawsuit would name both the hypothetical boarding school as an institution and the individual hypothetical perpetrators as individuals. Despite Bob and your attempt at equivocation, in this hypothetical case the BYU alumni Mormon lawyer that is representing the institution is also defending the individuals who abused the children, and -- as you say -- pouring salt in the victims wounds.
Can you provide evidence that the perpetrators retain separate counsel than the institutions that employ and enable them? I don't think so.
Can I provide evidence that most lawyers, including Mormon lawyer Daniel Adlong, that represent the institutions that abuse children and employ predators and child abusers, also present a defense for the child abusers themselves and individuals? Yes. Let me know if you'd like me to post some document images.
Read this account of how one Mormon lawyer we won't name, one you apparently admire for his willingness to defend a child molester, defended the Mormon Church from a lawsuit and subsequently prevented the perpetrator from being criminally prosecuted:
http://articles.dailypilot.com/2009-03- ... mon-churchIn most cases I'm familiar with, the defense of these institutions always includes lawyers trying to impugn the credibility of the victims -- in some of the most vile, immoral, evil, disgusting, dishonest ways possible. Asking if they were "aroused by the sexual abuse" and so on. I've linked to blogs about one Mormon lawyer who is said to behave very aggressively towards the victim of child abuse in the same manner and spirit as our other hypothetical Mormon lawyer. Coincidence?
A few questions:
Did Bob represent the boy, or the Church? Should the perp. have retained private counsel? Did he provide absolutely no defense for what the perp. did to the child? Did he have anything to do with the perp. not being criminally convicted?
http://articles.dailypilot.com/2009-03- ... mon-churchBut I am glad that there are competent attorneys will to defend those accused of sexual molestation of children, because not everyone so accused is guilty.
I know this is your area of expertise, so it doesn't surprise me that you cheer the profession no matter the client, but it does surprise me to hear a law school graduate try to make a distinction between an attorney representing institutions versus representing the agents of their institutions -- especially since you know that in most cases they are all named defendants in the same action and are almost always represented by the same firm (usually hired by the institution's insurance company).
I'm sincerely interested in such a seemingly confusing, contradictory explanation if you are so inclined.
Since Bob won't make good on his offer to take me to lunch, I'll have some time to check in on this thread and understand what point you are trying to make.