Reference no: EM132744057 
                                                                               
                                       
Assignment 1
Squiggy  Squigman retained attorney Laverne DeFazio to represent him on a  federal bank robbery charge. The indictment charged that Squigman had  robbed Milwaukee Bank on Shotz Street. The prosecutor's case depended in  part on photographic evidence obtained from hidden cameras in the bank.  None of the photographs clearly depicted the robber's face.
At their  first meeting, Squigman told DeFazio that, at the time of the robbery,  he was watching television at the home of his friend Shirley Feeney.
While  reviewing the evidence, DeFazio noticed that one of the bank photographs  showed the robber wearing a ring on the fourth finger of his right  hand. Later, at one of their trial preparation sessions, DeFazio saw  that Squigman had a ring on the same finger. DeFazio mentioned this to  Squigman, and the following conversation occurred:
Squigman: So what? Lots of people wear rings on that finger and lots of rings look like this one.
DeFazio: Yours has a "B" on it.
Squigman: You can't see the one in the bank photo clearly enough to see if there's a "B" on that one.
DeFazio: You might be able to if they blow it up.
After  the meeting ended, Squigman removed the ring and DeFazio never saw it  again. In a subsequent meeting, DeFazio noticed a tan ring line on  Squigman's finger and said, "The DA may ask you about the ring line on  your finger." Squigman did not respond.
During the trial, but before  he testified, Squigman asked DeFazio what he should do if the prosecutor  asks him if he owned a ring with a "B" on it.
"If you insist on testifying, you have to tell the truth," DeFazio said.
The  night before closing arguments were scheduled to begin, Squigman gave  DeFazio the balance of her legal fee in $100 bills. DeFazio noticed that  the serial numbers on 14 of the $100 bills corresponded to the serial  numbers identified during the testimony of a bank officer as the numbers  on some of the stolen bills.
DeFazio returned all 14 of the $100  bills to Squigman and told him to bring an equivalent sum in other  denominations. The following morning, Squigman came to court with bills  in various denominations, which DeFazio accepted.
In her closing  argument, DeFazio argued that the prosecutor was going after the wrong  man and urged the jury to believe Shirley Feeney's testimony confirming  Squiggy's alibi.
What standards of professional responsibility, if any, has DeFazio violated by her conduct in representing Squigman? Discuss.