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Document A-5854

AI Analysis

Summary: The document is a compilation of the publications and articles written by Stephen Gillers, a legal expert, covering topics such as legal ethics, law profession, and dispute resolution. It appears to be part of a larger court filing or exhibit. The list includes books, articles, and other writings published over several decades.
Significance: This document provides a detailed list of publications and articles by Stephen Gillers, an expert in legal ethics, which may be relevant to the case at hand, potentially establishing his credibility or expertise.
Key Topics: Publications by Stephen Gillers Legal ethics and profession Academic writings on law
Key People:
  • Stephen Gillers - Expert witness or individual whose publications and writings are being documented

Full Text

Case 1:20-cv-10033-PAE Document 61-3 Filed 08/24/22 Page 39 of 117 A-5854 Case 1:09-cr-00581-WHP Document 522 Filed 04/06/12 Page 12 of 29 Stephen Gillers PUBLICATIONS (continued) Investigating the FBI (co-Editor with P. Watters) (Doubleday, 1973; Ballantine, 1974) None of Your Business: Government Secrecy in America (co-Editor with N. Dorsen) (Viking, 1974; Penguin, 1975). I'd Rather Do It Myself: How to Set Up Your Own Law Firm (Law Journal Press, 1977). Looking At Law School: A Student Guide From the Society of American Law Teachers (editor and contributor) (Taplinger, 1977; NAL, 1977; revised ed., NAL, 1984; third ed., NAL, 1990). The Rights of Lawyers and Clients (Avon, 1979). "Four Policemen in London and Amsterdam," in R. Schrank (ed.) American Workers Abroad (MIT Press, 1979). "Dispute Resolution in Prison: The California Experience," and "New Faces in the Neighborhood Mediating the Forest Hills Housing Dispute," both in R. Goldmann (ed.) Roundtable Justice: Case Studies in Conflict Resolution (Westview Press, 1980). "The American Legal Profession," in A. Morrison (ed.), Fundamentals of American Law (Oxford University Press 1996). The Elsinore Appeal: People v. Hamlet (St. Martin's Press 1996). This book contains the text of Hamlet together with briefs and oral argument for and against affirmance of Prince Hamlet's (imaginary) murder convictions. The book arose out of a symposium sponsored by the Association of the Bar of the City of New York. "In the Pink Room," in Legal Ethics: Law Stories (D. Rhode & D. Luban, eds.) (Foundation Press, 2006) (also published as a freestanding monograph). ARTICLES: Guns, Fruit, Drugs, and Documents: A Criminal Defense Lawyer's Responsibility for Real Evidence, 63 Stan. L. Rev. 813 (2011) Is Law (Still) An Honorable Profession?, 19 Professional Lawyer 23 (2009)(based on a talk at Central Synagogue in Manhattan). 2 DOJ-OGR-00009458