Here is my new essay on Law360, with the story of Stefan Passantino's representation of Cassidy Hutchinson as a cautionary tale for other lawyers.
Law360, January 23, 2023
Jan. 6 Panel Transcripts Highlight Attorney Ethics Issues
Cassidy Hutchinson's testimony before the U.S. House of Representatives Select Committee to Investigate the Jan. 6 Attack on the U.S. Capitol appears to have inspired a criminal investigation by special prosecutor Jack Smith. As recently reported by The Washington Post,[1] an extensive new grand jury subpoena has been served on a number of Trump's associates, seeking two dozen categories of information, some of which has not previously been requested. One new question, according to the Washington Post, "asks recipients to reveal if anyone other than themselves are paying for legal representation," which appears to follow up on Hutchinson's testimony that her attorney — who was being paid by Save America PAC, a PAC affiliated with former President Donald Trump — had attempted to steer her testimony away from implicating Trump's coterie, at the expense of telling the full story.
The select committee's final report[2] noted that lawyers "receiving payments for the representation from a group allied with President Trump" may have engaged in "efforts to obstruct the Committee's investigation." The new subpoenas now signal the special prosecutor's concern that some of these efforts may have crossed into conduct that merits further investigation.
In the meantime, Hutchinson's account of her experience demonstrates how easily a lawyer's own political agenda can shape a witness's testimony. Hutchinson ultimately provided considerable information about Trump's behavior before, during and after the Capitol insurrection, but it did not come easily.
The former aide to chief of staff Mark Meadows was represented at three committee interviews by Stefan Passantino, former ethics counsel[3] in the Trump White House and an attorney for the Trump campaign[4] in a 2020 Georgia election challenge. As Hutchinson later alleged, Passantino attempted to convince her to avoid giving testimony damaging to Trump, with the admonition "the less you remember, the better."[5] Only after retaining a new attorney was Hutchinson able to describe everything she observed about White House activity surrounding the Jan. 6 attack.
The special prosecutor's subpoenas now suggest that other witnesses' testimony may have been influenced by lawyers being paid by Trump-linked organizations. Following the release of Hutchinson's complete interview transcripts, appended to the select committee's final report,[6] we can see some of the ways in which Passantino sought to guide her testimony, as she put it, "to focus on protecting the president."[7] According to the report, Passantino instructed Hutchinson to feign ignorance and poor
memory to avoid implicating Meadows "and the boss."
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