A good example of the true horrors in this world. Also a very good read for those who choose a career in law. I was fortunate enough to have Tom Alibrandi as an instructor while attending Imperial Valley College. I was able to hear firsthand of his experience writing this book and speaking with Frank Armani. Very compelling. This book is very well written and I would highly recommend it. The movie Sworn to Silence is based on this book, for those interested.
A Lawyer's Ethical Dilemma
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 16 years ago
PRIVILEGED INFORMATION is a book about upper New York State serial killer and rapist Robert Garrow. Written by Tom Alibrandi and Frank Armani, one of Garrow's attorneys, the book discusses in considerable detail Garrow's upbringing, his crimes, and the dilemma faced by Armani and co-counsel Francis Belge while defending him against charges that he had murdered a young man. During the course of interviewing Garrow, the lawyers learned the locations of the bodies of two young women whom Garrow admitted to having previously murdered. This information led to a soul-wrenching ethical problem for Armani and Belge - did they follow the prescribed code of conduct regarding the confidentiality of client-attorney information or did they release the information regarding the young women thereby bringing closure to the young women's parents and following another prescribed duty of lawyers, as officers of the court, to uphold the law? This conflict is presented clearly and concisely. The descriptions of Garrow's background, his crimes, and the lawyers' defense of Garrow are very well done and culminate in a uniquely fascinating courtroom scene. Alibrandi is an excellent writer, the book is fast paced and easy to read, and the research is solid and extensive. There are three reasons that I would not rate this book 5 stars. First, in my opinion, there is too much boilerplate "personalizing information" about some of the players. For example, I don't care what lawyers, judges, bartenders, etc. are wearing. And it is made abundently clear early in the book that Armani is a heavy smoker. As such it is really not necessary to regularly report that "Armani lit up a cigarette." Second there is no picture section in the book. I feel that one would have added to its enjoyment. And finally, the book describes in some detail how Garrow's parents brutalized him to the point where he became little more than a paranoid if cunning animal. The authors state that included in their research were interviews with the parents, yet there is nothing detailing the results of these interviews in the book. Including this information would have made for an even better book. Still, PRIVILEGED INFORMATION is very good true crime - well conceived, written, and researched and I highly recommend it to fans of the genre.
Good Story
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 17 years ago
This is a heartbreaking story for everyone involved, but while reading the book I understand more what attorneys must wrestle with when defending some criminals. It's easy for armchair quarterbacks to judge actions or non-actions of others, but at the time Armani felt he must do everything possible to represent Robert Garrow (as is Garrow's right and Armani's responsibility), no matter how despicable he is, in order to uphold professional code of conduct. Plea bargains for a lesser crime are very common, and it's not necessarily what those who seek retribution want, but it may be the way to ensure incarceration. The ethical and moral dilemma these lawyers came across is one that seems to me to be a matter of degree to what other lawyers must decide when defending a client. The book was well written and heartfelt to the families of the murdered girls, and I could feel his anguish.
Robert Garrow: serial murderer/rapist
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 18 years ago
This true crime work is apparently the only published account of the deadly career of Robert Garrow, a serial killer/rapist who terrorized the upstate New York/Adirondaks area in the early 1970s. Following an extensive manhunt throughout the Adirondaks, Garrow's capture led to a precedent setting trial in rural Herkimer County. Defended by Syracuse attorneys Francis Belge and Frank Armani, his subsequent conviction and ensuing escape from state prison proved the adage that truth is stranger then fiction. Co-authored by Attorney Armani, the book provides fascinating insider insights into the bizarre Garrow, the clever trial strategies, and the toil the case took on all parties. A real page turner, Privileged Information should be on every true crime aficionado's book shelf.
haunting moral questions
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 24 years ago
This is a case that has haunted me since I first read about it in Law School. Frank Armani and Francis Beige were Central New York attorneys appointed to represent serial killer/rapist Robert Garrow, who went on a crime spree in the Adirondacks in 1973. Their client was charged with one killing but revealed to them the location of two other bodies. After checking to be sure the bodies were there, the attorneys tried, unsuccessfully, to use this information as part of a plea bargain. Meanwhile, they were contacted by the distraught father of one of these victims, begging for information about the fate of his child. Believing that forensic evidence available from the remains might tend to further incriminate Garrow, they refused to acknowledge any information about other potential victims. Eventually, Garrow himself revealed the information at trial and the attorneys were charged with violating the code of professional conduct. Though the case and the surrounding publicity had devastating effects on the two men, they were ultimately exonerated, on the basis that they had acted within the scope of attorney-client privilege.Though I would have behaved differently, I do not particularly quarrel with the attorneys' actions. I do though find the ethical regime which requires such a result to be abhorrent. The basic theory underlying attorney-client privilege is that in order to guarantee the best possible defense, clients must fully disclose all information to their attorneys, and that the only way to insure that they feel comfortable doing so is to grant the privilege. This reasoning is simply not compelling. If full disclosure really is essential to a good defense, then the client has a vested interest in disclosure--they after all are the ones most interested in a good defense. It seems entirely fair to let them choose between holding back incriminating information at their own expense, or sharing that information at some peril. Moreover, to allow (arguably, to require) lawyers to withhold such information from the Court is to turn the legal system into more of a game than a search for truth and justice. I have no problem with a set of ethical rules, societal laws and constitutional rights, which seeks to protect the innocent from unfair prosecution and even to protect the guilty from abusive practices, but this must be balanced against society's interest in protecting its citizenry, enforcing the law and meting out justice. There has to be some difference between preventing law enforcement officers from beating information out of a suspect or illegally searching his premises, and officers of the Court actually withholding evidence that they are aware of, however obtained. I just don't see what interest was vindicated by concealing the existence and location of the two corpses. Were they revealed to law enforcement it would not negatively impact Garrow's access to a fair trial : if he did not kill them, he
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