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A lawyer continually advises his client not to answer the question "Would you pass a drug test?" Problem was that the question was being asked by a judge.
The judge ruled that advising your client to exercise his 5th amendment right against self-incrimination was contempt of court, and jailed the lawyer.
Note that the lawyer was in jail for only a few hours before an appeals court ordered him released pending appeal. I suspect that jailing lawyers for doing their job would be unpopular to all lawyers, no matter their views.
A lawyer continually advises his client not to answer the question "Would you pass a drug test?" Problem was that the question was being asked by a judge.
The judge ruled that advising your client to exercise his 5th amendment right against self-incrimination was contempt of court, and jailed the lawyer.
Note that the lawyer was in jail for only a few hours before an appeals court ordered him released pending appeal. I suspect that jailing lawyers for doing their job would be unpopular to all lawyers, no matter their views.
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