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RULE 6.2 ACCEPTING APPOINTMENTS
For good cause a lawyer may seek to avoid appointment by a tribunal to represent a person.
There is no disciplinary penalty for a violation of this Rule.
Comment
[1] A lawyer ordinarily is not obliged to accept a client whose
character or cause the lawyer regards as repugnant. The lawyer's
freedom to select clients is, however, qualified. All lawyers have a
responsibility to assist in providing pro bono publico service. See
Rule 6.1: Voluntary Pro Bono Publico Service. An individual lawyer
fulfills this responsibility by accepting a fair share of unpopular
matters or indigent or unpopular clients. A lawyer may also be subject
to appointment by a court to serve unpopular clients or persons unable
to afford legal services.
Appointed Counsel
[2] For good cause a lawyer may seek to decline an appointment to
represent a person who cannot afford to retain counsel or whose cause
is unpopular. Good cause exists if the lawyer could not handle the
matter competently, see Rule 1.1: Competence, or if undertaking the
representation would result in an improper conflict of interest, for
example, when the client or the cause is so repugnant to the lawyer as
to be likely to impair the client-lawyer relationship or the lawyer's
ability to represent the client. A lawyer may also seek to decline an
appointment if acceptance would be unreasonably burdensome, for
example, when it would impose a financial sacrifice so great as to be
unjust.
[3] An appointed lawyer has the same obligations to the client as
retained counsel, including the obligations of loyalty and
confidentiality, and is subject to the same limitations on the
client-lawyer relationship, such as the obligation to refrain from
assisting the client in violation of the Rules.
[4] This Rule is not intended to be enforced through disciplinary process.