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ASSOCIATION OF THE BAR OF THE CITY
OF NEW YORK COMMITTEE ON PROFESSIONAL AND JUDICIAL ETHICS
Year 1994 Ethics Opinions
THE ASSOCIATION OF THE BAR OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK
FORMAL OPINION 1994-7
COMMITTEE ON
PROFESSIONAL AND JUDICIAL ETHICS
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May 16, 1994
ACTION: FORMAL OPINION
TOPIC: Contributions to candidates campaigning for New York
State Attorney General, District Attorney, and other offices closely tied to
the judicial process.
OPINION:
DIGEST: Candidates for New York
State Attorney General, District Attorney, and other offices
closely tied to the judicial process should not personally
solicit campaign contributions, but should establish committees
to do so, as candidates for judicial posts do, and avoid learning
the names of those contributing to their campaigns.
CODE: DRs 1-102(A)(5),
8-101(A)(3), 9-101(C); EC 7-34; CJC Section 5C(2).
QUESTION
Should a candidate for New York
State Attorney General, District Attorney, or another office
closely tied to the judicial process personally solicit campaign
contributions or otherwise attempt to learn the identity of
individuals that donated to their campaigns?
OPINION
The work of an Attorney General or
District Attorney is closely tied to the judicial process. Like
the work of judges, service as Attorney General or District
Attorney involves daily decision-making that directly impacts
attorneys and their clients. In our Opinion 882 (1973)
(simultaneously released as N.Y. State 289), we urged candidates
for judicial office to screen themselves from their contributors
and to make diligent efforts to avoiod learning the identities of
the donors to their campaigns. Because the rationale and policy
underlying our Opinion 882 is equally applicable to those
campaigning for the offices of Attorney General, District
Attorney and other similar offices, we today expand our prior
opinion to cover such candidates. n1
n1 See also N.Y. City Bd. of
Ethics Opn. No. 35 (1961) (quoted in The Midas Touch: Campaign
Finance Practices of Statewide Officeholders, New York State
Comm'n on Gov't Integrity 132 (1989) ("The solicitation of
funds for political purposes by a public official from those
whose matters come before him or his agency for official action
is offensive to proper ethical standards.")).
In Opinion 882, we opined that
candidates for judicial office and their family members should
not personally solicit contributions other than through a
committee. See also New York Code of Judicial Conduct, n2 Section
5C(2) (candidates for judicial office should not personally
solicit or accept funds but may establish committees to secure
and manage the expenditure of funds for the campaign). In
addition, to avoid the appearance of impropriety, the Committee
suggested that the names of the people who contributed to the
campaign be shielded from the candidate to the extent legally
feasible.
n2 As adopted by the House of
Delegates of the New York State Bar Association on November 8,
1993.
It is the opinion of this
Committee that, like candidates for judicial office, candidates
for offices closely tied to the judicial process and their family
members should not personally solicit campaign contributions.
They should establish committees to do so and, to the extent
permitted by law, avoid learning the names of the contributors
and the amount of their donations. Although such shielding is not
specifically required by the Code of Professional Responsibility,
the Committee believes that it would be consistent with the
spirit and highest principles of the Code, including DR
8-101(A)(3) ("A lawyer who holds public office shall not . .
. [a]ccept anything of value from any person when the lawyer
knows or it is obvious that the offer is for other purpose of
influencing the lawyer's action as a public official"), DR
1-102(A)(5) ("A lawyer shall not . . . [e]ngage in conduct
that is prejudicial to the administration of justice") and
EC 7-34 ("The impartiality of a public servant in our legal
system may be impaired by the receipt of gifts or loans. A
lawyer, therefore, is never justified in making a gift or a loan
to a judge, a hearing officer, or an officer or employee of a
tribunal except as permitted by . . . the Code of Judicial
Conduct, but a lawyer may make a contribution to the campaign
fund of a candidate for judicial office in conformity with . . .
the Code of Judicial Conduct"). n3
n3 Cf. 22 N.Y.C.R.R. §
100.7(a)(2)(i) (1993) (a judge may attend a fundraising dinner or
affair only during the period nine months before a primary
election and six months after the general election if the judge
is a candidate in the general election but prohibition against
personal solicitations remains in force even with respect to such
dinners or affairs).
Attorneys should also be aware of
the constraints imposed upon them by the Code of Professional
Responsibility in making campaign contributions to candidates for
Attorney General, District Attorney or similar offices. In
particular, DR 9-101(C) bars a lawyer from "stating or
implying that the lawyer is able to influence improperly or upon
irrelevant grounds any tribunal, legislative body, or public
official." Thus, an attorney who makes a donation to a
candidate for an office such as Attorney General may not
represent, either explicitly or by implication of any kind, that
the attorney can or expects or even hopes to obtain favorable
treatment as a result of the donation. Certainly, it follows that
attorneys should not make contributions for the purpose of
influencing any public official on behalf of their clients,
regardless of whether the attorneys assert or imply the power to
assert such influences. Attorneys who do not contribute in order
to influence candidates improperly should not be concerned that
the candidates will be unaware of their contributions. Indeed,
every legitimate reason for contributing to a political campaign
-- for example, to assist the candidate believed best qualified
for the job in attaining office -- is served by the mere making
of the contribution without attribution.
CONCLUSION
Candidates for the offices of
Attorney General, District Attorney, and other similar offices,
as well as attorneys donating to their campaigns, should adhere
to the guidelines set forth above.
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