Tressel's Email's Leaked

BGIF

Varsity Club
Messages
43,946
Reaction score
2,922
Didn't The Attorney Violate Client Priviledge?

Didn't The Attorney Violate Client Priviledge?

Former OSU player was lawyer who sent Tressel e-mails, report says

COLUMBUS, Ohio — The Columbus Dispatch is reporting that a former Ohio State football player is the lawyer who sent e-mails to football coach Jim Tressel last spring telling him that players were selling memorabilia.

The newspaper, citing three unidentified sources, reports Columbus attorney Christopher Cicero sent the e-mails. Cicero lettered in football at Ohio State in 1983, when Tressel was an assistant coach, according to The Columbus Dispatch.

In a statement released Wednesday Cicero says he voluntarily cooperated when an Ohio State attorney asked him to meet with university representatives and the NCAA about e-mails he exchanged with Tressel.

The university on Tuesday suspended Tressel for the first two games of the 2011 season and fined him $250,000 for failing to notify the school about the players' involvement.

I thought I read last night that the tattooer had come to him to discuss his troubles. Cicero than passed that info on to Tressel identifying the tatooer.
 

dshans

They call me The Dribbler
Messages
9,624
Reaction score
1,181
There are two things that bother me with this passage from the article: "In a statement released Wednesday Cicero says he voluntarily cooperated when an Ohio State attorney asked him to meet with university representatives and the NCAA about e-mails he exchanged with Tressel."

First is this – is the "Ohio State attorney" simply an attorney residing in Ohio or one on staff as an "Attorney of the State of Ohio?" A picky linguistic/journalistic thing, perhaps, but important nonetheless. Language (and even punctuation --- note arguments over the second amendment to the United States Constitution) when concerned with statutes and laws matter.

I could go further afield but won't. For now, at least.

Suffice it to say that I feel Tressel's actions were indefensible in light of his knowledge, ill-gotten or otherwise, but that the stance of tOSU's Athletic Director and President are reprehensible.

The second is client/attorney confidentiality. Right or wrong, according to one's opinion on the matter, the current law of the land is that an attorney is required to keep his or her ****ing yap shut about a client's statements unless an intervening or overriding law takes precedence.
 
Last edited:
M

Me2SouthBend

Guest
Several years ago I was golfing at Waterville CC in Southwest Ireland, a brilliant course arrived at after traveling the Ring of Kerry. During the round, I hit a wayward shot that landed in the Gorse (not sure of spelling) which is awful rough you do not want to be in. My caddy turned to me and said "Son, it looks like you've hit into the Honeymoon Grass". I replied, "what's Honeymoon Grass"? He responded in his brilliant Brogue "When you go there, you're F*****". Hey Coach Tressel, welcome to the Honeymoon Grass!
 
Top