Opening Argument – Kenneth Starr v. The Legal Profession
by Stuart Taylor, Jr
One of Kenneth Starr’s lesser-noted but more interesting problems is the criticism he has drawn from his own profession.
The amicus briefs by the American Bar Association and three other national lawyers’ organizations in a pending Supreme Court case are but one example. They argue forcefully that Starr is flouting settled practice in his bid to compel evidence from the late Vincent Foster’s lawyer, James Hamilton, by claiming that Foster’s attorney-client privilege died with him in July 1993.
Prominent lawyers have also denounced Starr’s tactics on other issues with a passion that is surprising, given the praise he received when he was appointed independent counsel almost four years ago.
Meanwhile, adversaries such as President Clinton’s lead lawyer, David Kendall–another respected member of the legal establishment–trash Starr with a venom that seems to transcend the customary head-butting of opposing counsel.
What explains all this? Has Kenneth Starr, who was seen as a courtly conciliator when he was a judge, simply gone berserk? Has he been taken hostage by gonzo prosecutors on his staff?
Although Starr has surely been aggressive–perhaps too aggressive, in some instances–he has not become the wild man of the legal profession. Nor is he in the lawyers’ doghouse solely because of the partisan rancor that would accompany the criminal investigation of any President by an independent counsel who has been active in the opposing political party.