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Jurisdiction

Legal Ethics Should Not Be Confused with Government Ethics

<p>Many local government attorneys insist that government ethics laws should not apply to them because they are covered by legal ethics rules. In fact, some government ethics codes have express exceptions for attorneys. I have always insisted that the two are very separate and should not be confused with each other.

The Public Sea and Local Government Ethics Jurisdiction

Most of George Frederickson's lecture, "<a href="http://academic.udayton.edu/richardghere/MPA%20524/2011%20course/Freder…; target="”_blank”">Searching for Virtue in the Public Life: Revisiting the Vulgar Ethics Thesis</a>," involves what he calls "the modern extended state," the "vast public
sea" in which governments float. This public sea includes

In Nevada Legislative Immunity Case, Oral Arguments Raise Some Serious Issues

The <a href="http://www.nvsupremecourt.us/info/audio/04.20.09_53064.php&quot; target="”_blank”">oral
arguments</a> before the Nevada Supreme Court in the Commission on
Ethics v. Hardy appeal are now available in MP3 format, suitable for
your media player.<br>
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It doesn't look as if the decision will be a good one for government

The Enforcement of Ethics Laws Against Local Government Legislators

The decision of the Louisiana First Circuit Court of Appeal in <a href="http://www.la-fcca.org/Opinions/Pub2008/2008-05/2007CW2342May2008.Pub.1…; target="”_blank”">In
re Arnold</a> (May 23, 2008) causes serious problems with respect to
ethics enforcement against local government legislators, at least in
Louisiana. It opens up a can of worms that I haven't seen discussed