Executive orders that have targeted law firms are having a chilling effect on pro bono work and serving the underserved, but attorneys must remember their duty to protect and defend the Constitution and the rule of law, said panelists during a recent ABA webinar.
The May 29 webinar, “Under Fire: Resisting Attacks on Lawyers and the Rule of Law,” is part of the ABA’s Rule of Law in America series.
The executive orders that have put many law firms in the administration’s crosshairs have three things in common: retaliation, intimidation and an assault on the rule of law and independence of the bench, said Robert Van Nest, partner at Keker Van Nest and Peters in San Francisco.
The administration’s actions have “decimated the career workforce and driven out a lot of expertise that is essential to fulfilling the mission of the Department of Justice,” said Liz Oyer, the recently fired U.S. pardon attorney at DOJ. Oyer, who was terminated after she refused to follow a directive by the administration to restore gun rights to actor Mel Gibson without vetting him, added that the current DOJ is not interested in upholding the rule of law.
Elizabeth Cabraser, partner at Lieff Cabraser Heimann and Bernstein in San Francisco, noted the role and responsibilities of lawyers, which are especially important in the current political climate. “We are the voice for our clients, even when their viewpoints are unpopular,” she said. “We are the intermediaries between individuals and the legal system.”