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Baseball Primer Newsblog— The Best News Links from the Baseball Newsstand
Monday, January 28, 2008
Breaking down the monolithigious Clemens document with Calcaterra.
I think the answer to that question lies with the idea I had the day the lawsuit was filed, and that’s that this whole exercise is about Hall of Fame PR, not litigation. Indeed, I don’t think Clemens had any plans at all to sue McNamee until McNamee’s lawyers said that they would sue if Clemens went on 60 Minutes. Fearing a suit, Clemens’ folks had to file first out of sheer defense, ensuring that, if a battle was to be fought, it would be fought in Texas. But then a funny thing happened: McNamme’s lawyers seemed to back down on the eve of the 60 Minutes broadcast. Only Clemens didn’t get the message until his folks filed that Sunday night, and now Rocket is left in the awkward position of having filed a lawsuit that he didn’t want in the first place.
But though the reality of the situation has changed from PR to litigation, the strategy has not, and this report can only be seen as an exercise in the former, not the latter. Prudent litigation counsel does not choose to fight their cases in the media, however, they fight them through their pleadings and with their legal arguments. This is something Clemens’ people aren’t doing right now, and for Clemens’ sake, they be well-advised to cut it out.
Repoz
Posted: January 28, 2008 at 09:46 PM | 13 comment(s)
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Jesus, how can we frickin' put any trust in what this jerkwad author has to say when he makes stupid grammatical mistakes like that.
Man.
(1) are you talking about leaving the 'd off the end of a word?
(2) are you serious?
i like roger clemens
i dislike you
i dislike you also
no need to read after this point
Yes.
Yes, because I'm the one who wrote it. Gimmie a break, I've only been to two Self-loathers Anonymous meetings.
I disagree. Litigation and the lawyers exist to serve the interest of the client, not the other way around. Clemens is mostly fighting a PR battle, in the press, in Congress, and through his litigation. They believe that this is helping to prepare the ground for some of that.
I constantly tell my clients that the litigation should not govern their life; their life comes first, and the litigation should be made to fit into it.
Also, there is a very high probability that the litigation will settle or peter out. McNamee really does not have the resources to fund the type of litigation that Clemens can. There are a dozen different ways that it can be worked out. Or strung out. Depending on the preferred PR strategy.
Hardin would presumably prefer not to do it that way, but he has an unusual client in an unusual situation.
I suspect that Randy Hendricks (and Rusty Hardin) know that this Clemens Manifesto is not going to convince anyone of anything. It certainly won't convince the people who think Clemens is guilty that Clemens didn't use steroids, and the people who are giving Clemens the benefit of the doubt are already aware that the statistical record can't possibly prove (or disprove) that Clemens used steroids.
In that sense I think the purpose of the manifesto is simply to add to the aura of innocence that Clemens is trying to create, i.e., that he did not use steroids and that he is willing to do everything he can to fight the accusations. In this respect, he's fighting the battle on several fronts: statements, interviews, press conferences, Congressional testimony, lawsuit, and now this manifesto.
As to the lawsuit itself, he obviously wants to win it (and I think needs to win it if it goes to a jury), but his reason for filing it was that it adds to the PR battle, so in that sense I think his lawyers understand that the risks he is taking (e.g. holding a press conference, making public statements, etc) -- while risks that they perhaps wouldn't advise a normal client to take -- are nonetheless necessary for the overall strategy he has adopted.
If Clemens's sole strategy were to win the litigation, then of course he wouldn't be doing all of this other stuff. But, as we've seen, his strategy is much broader than that -- and in a sense, it had to be, since he was going to have to testify in front of Congress anyway if he hoped to convince anyone that he didn't do this. (He could have plead the Fifth, but that would have been a death knell for him PR-wise.)
In that sense I think the impending specter of Congressional testimony basically forced Clemens out of the darkness here, and basically foreclosed any idea he might have had of adopting a narrow PR strategy simply focused on winning the litigation.
Sometimes you don't have a choice, because the case is a matter of public interest. I've had a few of those. In those cases, the client is advised to retain professional PR people (unless they have some on staff), because that is really beyond the scope of my competence.
I'd question the ethics of using litigation for PR purposes (though we know it's done all the time).
Not just unethical. It can be tortious (depending on the abuse of process/malicious prosecution law in the jurisdiction), and a violation of Court Rules, assuming the jurisdiction has some form of FRCP Rule 11.
For those interested in the ethics, there is a version of Rule 3.1 of the Rules of Professional Conduct in most states:
I'd hope that if Clemens is lying through his teeth, Hardin doesn't know, even if it requires quite intentional ignorance on his part. I mean, it's one thing to defend a person you know to be guilty of a crime, for example, because there are myriad defenses you can trot out that aren't likely to lead to perjury or other nonsense. With a defamation case, though, man, we're talking pretty zero-sum here.
Has never worked for me, that's for sure. Most of my work is defense though. Whenever those clients are on the receiving end of the publicity threat, they've made the same damn analysis: do we have unacceptable exposure? If yes, settle. If no, screw em. When they publicize, we'll deny and take it from there.
Edit: and yeah, what Srul said.
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