The attorney-client privilege did not protect information contained in draft bankruptcy forms from disclosure in a debtor's prosecution for bankruptcy fraud because the debtor intended his attorney to reveal the information contained in the drafts in his bankruptcy filings. Draft bankruptcy filings are no more entitled to protection on the basis of privilege than are the filing actually made. Neither were the draft versions of the debtor's bankruptcy forms protected attorney work product. The work product doctrine protects materials prepared "in anticipation of litigation." The bankruptcy filing was not itself "litigation" in anticipation which the draft forms were created.
Sunday, December 9, 2007
U.S. v. Naegele, Criminal No. 05-0151
Posted by Rachel Lynn Foley at 2:29 PM
Labels: 4th Circuit, attorney-client privilege
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