
We Need to Talk: Modernizing Attorney-Client Jail Communications
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Attorney-client jail phone calls, video calls, and emails are all routinely recorded and monitored by jails, with numerous examples of jails and private telecommunications providers giving those recordings and emails to law enforcement and prosecutors. This widespread failure to protect the confidentiality of attorney-client communications prevents lawyers from being able to enjoy easy, quick, and regular communications with their clients. In practice, and despite the ever-expanding communication methods in the outside world, those held in jails in this country while their criminal cases are pending are effectively stuck in the nineteenth century when the only way to communicate was in person or through a written letter. The pandemic brought new urgency to this problem as jails closed and in-person visits stopped. This left lawyers with snail mail as the only option to communicate confidentially with their clients.
This Article challenges current practices. As the pandemic highlighted, this is no longer a small problem to be looked at through the lens of individual lawsuits, cases, and motions. The failure to protect attorney-client confidential communications is a systemic problem demanding systemic solutions. Moreover, the problem remains serious and steadfast even as the pandemic continues to recede and fade away; the pandemic acted as a spotlight, helping to focus on this issue and recognize its severity. This Article concludes that the most direct path to meaningful change rests in criminal courts—the judges, the
administrators, and the clerks each recognizing that their failure to take meaningful action with telecommunication service providers—to protect the confidentiality of electronic attorney-client communication impacts not just their legitimacy, but also the efficiency of court operations.
Cynthia Alkon *
* Professor of Law, Director of the Criminal Law, Justice, & Policy Program, Texas A&M University School of Law. Thank you for the helpful comments and feedback from Jill Gross, Brendan Maher, Kelly Browe Olson, Andrea Kupfer Schneider, Peter Reilly, Nancy Welsh, Rachel Kincaid, David Kwok and the participants at the Texas Criminal Scholars 2023 Workshop and the Southeastern Association of Law Schools 2023 Conference, Discussion Group on Reforms, Restoration, and Resistance: Criminal Justice and Injustice. Thank you also to participants at the Experimental ADR II Conference, 2023, at the University of
Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law; the International Association for Conflict Management 2022 Conference; and to the faculty at Marquette University School of Law for giving comments and feedback on earlier works that included discussions on the topic of this Article. Thank you also to my research assistants, Kyle Chrisman, Dalia El-Giar, Maya Madden, Brandon Martin, and Hannah Singley.