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Ethics and Integrity
for Senior Attorneys
June 2016
A Work in Progress
Why do ethics matter?
• The law imposes some ethical restrictions on behavior
• Laws speaking to individual ethical responsibilities and restrictions (Ethics in Government
Act of 1978; Bribery provisions of Title 18; Hatch Act; etc.)
• Rules of professional responsibility under your State Bar establish ethical rules
2
Why do ethics matter?
Your Oath of Office
“I, [name], do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will support and
defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies,
foreign and domestic; that I will bear true faith and allegiance to
the same; that I take this obligation freely, without any mental
reservation or purpose of evasion; and that I will well and
faithfully discharge the duties of the office on which I am about to
enter. So help me God.
3
Source: 5 U.S.C. § 3331,
Article VI of the Constitution
Why do ethics matter?
• Protecting democracy
• The point of our ethics systems in government is to “reinforce the public’s confidence in the institutions of
government. If such systems fail at this purpose, they are paper structures that can actually increase the public’s
cynicism.” ~ Stuart Gilman (former Director of the Office of Government Ethics) (2003).
• Laws that establish how government operates as an organization: Administrative Procedures Act
• The various features of the APA requiring access and oversight “establish ethical obligations for government organizations
and those who work in them.” ~ Newell (2015)
• BUT, ethics laws do not make government ethical.
• “If angels were to govern men, neither external nor internal controls on government would be necessary. In
framing a government which is to be administered by men over men, the great difficulty lies in this: you must
first enable the government to control the governed; and in the next place oblige it to control itself.” ~ James
Madison
4
Why do ethics matter?
• Personal integrity
• Individual motivations
• “Somebody once said that in looking for people to hire, you look for three qualities:
integrity, intelligence, and energy. And if they don’t have the first, the other two will kill
you.” ~ Warren Buffett.
5
Why do we need to address it today?
• Examples of unethical behavior abound
• Jeff Neely, GSA
• Activities at Abu Ghraib prison
• USSS agents activities in Cartagena hotel scandal
• FEMA formaldehyde trailers
• Enron & Arthur Andersen
• Volkswagen “defeat devices”
6
Why do we need to address it today?
• OPM Survey Responses
7
Source: 2015 Federal Employee Viewpoint Survey
“My organization’s senior leaders maintain high
standards of honesty and integrity.”
Positive Neutral Negative
Government-wide 52.3% 24.1% 23.6%
Department of Homeland Security 36.8% 23.7% 39.4%
Why do we need to address it today?
• Sometimes senior officials do not welcome a discussion of ethics or action
based on ethics.
• Then what do you do?
• How do you avoid becoming that senior official?
• Whether we like it or not, we are immersed in politics.
8
Spotting Ethics Issues
• Two kinds of ethics issues: (Kidder (1995))
1. Moral temptations
• Right vs. Wrong
• Governed by law or regulation
• One right answer
• Conflict between moral and immoral values
9
Spotting Ethics Issues
• Two kinds of ethics issues (cont.):
2. Ethical dilemma
• Right vs. Right
• Governed by conscience
• Two or more right answers
• Conflict between moral values
10
Spotting Ethics Issues
• Are you responsible for addressing an ethics issue?
• Squarely on you
• Others
• Inspector General (Management Directive 0810.1)
11
How to Decide
• Identify facts and value conflicts
• The problem
12
How to Decide
• Tactics for quiet leaders
1. Don’t kid yourself
2. Trust mixed motives
3. Buy a little time
4. Invest wisely
5. Drill down
6. Nudge, test, and evaluate gradually
7. Craft a compromise
13
Source: Badaracco (2002)
How to Decide
• Three quiet virtues
1. Restraint
2. Modesty
3. Tenacity
14
Source: Badaracco (2002)
How to Decide
• Identify options
• Avoid common default of assuming an “either-or” answer to all problems
• Generate options
15
How to Decide
• Test your assumptions
• Conversational inquiry, not adversarial inquiry
• Do it early
• Talk to discover, not to persuade
• Listen, don’t just formulate arguments
16
Source: Newell (2015)
How to Decide
• Challenges to ethical behavior
1. Failing to integrate reason and emotion
• Don’t kid yourself into thinking that there is no role for emotion
• Probe your emotions—what are they telling you?
2. Facts, not just beliefs
• Tendency to view facts selectively
3. Allowing status threats to overwhelm good thinking
17
Source: Newell (2015)
How to Decide
• Challenges to ethical behavior (cont.)
4. Making an ethical decision when taxed and tired
• Early in the day
• Avoid multi-tasking
• Remove distractions
5. Thinking too fast
• Slow down
• Test assumptions
• Discuss with others with an open mind
18
Source: Newell (2015)
How to Decide
• Challenges to ethical behavior (cont.)
6. Mental biases and heuristics
• Confirmation bias
• Sunk costs
• Anchoring bias
• Availability
19
Source: Kahneman, Slovic,
and Tversky (1982)
How to Decide
• Tools to remember
• Timing
• Ability to remain calm
• The power of saying “No”
20
Taking Action & Explaining your View
• Practice using the right language before presenting
• How will you frame your ethical decision (opportunity/reproach)
• Think beforehand about how you will be challenged
21
Taking Action & Explaining your View
• Ethical “enablers”
• Under your control
• Finding allies
• Having all relevant information
• Understanding stakeholders
• How you select/sequence audiences
• Appealing to shared purposes/values
• Using your strengths
22
Source: Kiddler (2005)
Taking Action & Explaining your View
• Ethical “enablers” (cont.)
• Within an organization
• Organizational policies, practices
• Organizational values on ethics, debate, and discussion
• Existing mechanisms for open debate and discussion
• Systems for raising questions (eg. Ombudsman)
• Organizational history of doing the right thing
23
Taking Action & Explaining your View
• Speaking truth to power
• Elements needed for moral courage
1. Must be in service to moral principles
2. Must understand the dangers
3. Endurance
• Two things are not enough
24
Source: Kiddler (2005)
Taking Action & Explaining your View
• Guidelines for loyal dissent
1. Know that dissent tries the patience of superiors—do not do it lightly
2. Do not shoot from the hip. Do your homework
3. Clearly take ownership of your dissent
4. Don’t personalize the challenge
5. Be objective and balanced in your analysis
6. Don’t challenge superiors in public unnecessarily
25
Source: John Johns, Federal
Executive Institute
Taking Action & Explaining your View
• Guidelines for loyal dissent (cont.)
7. Do not expect radical change in opposing views
8. Know your boss
9. Provide alternatives to the position you are challenging
10. Choose your time to challenge
11. Recognize when you have pushed to the limit
12. Always remember that you may be wrong
13. Accept rejection graciously…OR…
26
Source: John Johns, Federal
Executive Institute
Taking Action & Explaining your View
• Final options
• Acquiescence
• Going over your boss
• Requesting reassignment
• Whistleblowing
• Resign
27
Source: John Johns, Federal
Executive Institute
Organizations and Ethics
• Behavioral norms are powerful forces within an organization
• “Normalization of deviance”
28
Source: (Vaughan 1996)
Organizations and Ethics
• Dangers of hierarchy
• Special challenge for large organizations: making sure that decision-makers have all of
the relevant information
• Tendency in some organizations to contain problems and resolve them at a lower level
without passing information up to decision-makers
• Specialization and the diffusion of responsibility
29
Organizations and Ethics
• External pressures can impact ethics
• Example: NASA and Challenger catastrophe (1986)
• Timing pressures (White House, media, Congress)
• Example: FEMA Sandy Litigation
• As supervisors and leaders, you need to contain the impact of these pressures—do
not just pass them down to subordinates.
• Most often, those exerting the pressures will not be the ones held to account for
ethical failures.
30
Organizations and Ethics
• Elements of positive ethical culture
• Leadership by example: Employees look to leaders—especially their immediate
supervisor—for signals about whether ethics matter. As a supervisor:
• Take ethics issues very seriously
• Speak to employees about ethical guidelines and their role as an attorney
• When facing a tough decision, discuss the ethical dimensions with employees
• Clearly express expectations concerning ethical behavior
• Model ethical behavior in personal behavior and in work decisions
31
Source: Newell (2015)
Organizations and Ethics
• Elements of positive ethical culture (cont.)
• Encouragement of differences
• E.g., USSS Director Clancy testimony
• Rewards, sanctions, and peer support
32
Pitfalls for Leaders
• List of leaders that have faced disgrace because of ethical lapses is long
(David Petraeus, Richard Nixon, Bill Clinton, etc.)
• The Bathsheba Syndrome
• Personal and organizational benefits that come with success can set leaders up for
ethical failure
 Less or no supervision
 Access to people and networks; privileged access
 Decision-making power
33
Source: Ludwig &
Longnecker (1993)
Pitfalls for Leaders
• Tactics to avoid ethical traps of leadership
• Avoid leadership isolation
• Minimize the stress of your job. Live a balanced life.
• Do not delegate decisions with major ethics components unless you have high
confidence in the ethics of your subordinates.
• Understand the dangers of the slippery slope
• Commit to ethical action publicly
• Others?
34
Source: Newell (2015)
Special Rules for Members of the Bar
• Model Rule 2.1
• Lawyers are to render independent professional judgment
• In rendering advice, a lawyer may refer not only to law, but to other considerations such as
moral factors
• Model Rule 5.1
• A lawyer having supervisory authority over another lawyer shall make reasonable efforts to
ensure that the other lawyer conforms to the Rules of Professional Conduct.
35
Special Rules for Members of the Bar
• Model Rule 8.4
• It is professional misconduct for a lawyer to engage in conduct involving dishonesty,
fraud, deceit, or misrepresentation.
• Rule is not limited to the context of lawyer-client relationship; it reaches conduct
outside the practice of law.
36
Other Points for Discussion?
37
Bibliography
• Dan Ariely, The (Honest) Truth About Dishonesty (2012).
• Joseph Badarraco, Jr., Leading Quietly (2002).
• Stuart C. Gilman, Government Ethics: If Only Angels Were to Govern (2003).
• Daniel Kahneman, Paul Slovic, and Amos Tversky, Judgment under uncertainty: Heuristics and biases (1982).
• Rushworth Kidder, How Good People Make Tough Choices (1995).
• Dean Ludwig and Clinton Longnecker, The Bathsheba Syndrome: The Ethical Failure of Successful Leaders, 12
Journal of Business Ethics 265 (1993).
• Terry Newell, To Serve with Honor: Doing the Right Thing in Government (2015).
• Report of the President’s Commission on the Space Shuttle Challenger Accident (June 6, 1986). (“Rogers
Report”)
38

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Ethics Presentation_Maher_June of 2016.pptx

  • 1. Ethics and Integrity for Senior Attorneys June 2016 A Work in Progress
  • 2. Why do ethics matter? • The law imposes some ethical restrictions on behavior • Laws speaking to individual ethical responsibilities and restrictions (Ethics in Government Act of 1978; Bribery provisions of Title 18; Hatch Act; etc.) • Rules of professional responsibility under your State Bar establish ethical rules 2
  • 3. Why do ethics matter? Your Oath of Office “I, [name], do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic; that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same; that I take this obligation freely, without any mental reservation or purpose of evasion; and that I will well and faithfully discharge the duties of the office on which I am about to enter. So help me God. 3 Source: 5 U.S.C. § 3331, Article VI of the Constitution
  • 4. Why do ethics matter? • Protecting democracy • The point of our ethics systems in government is to “reinforce the public’s confidence in the institutions of government. If such systems fail at this purpose, they are paper structures that can actually increase the public’s cynicism.” ~ Stuart Gilman (former Director of the Office of Government Ethics) (2003). • Laws that establish how government operates as an organization: Administrative Procedures Act • The various features of the APA requiring access and oversight “establish ethical obligations for government organizations and those who work in them.” ~ Newell (2015) • BUT, ethics laws do not make government ethical. • “If angels were to govern men, neither external nor internal controls on government would be necessary. In framing a government which is to be administered by men over men, the great difficulty lies in this: you must first enable the government to control the governed; and in the next place oblige it to control itself.” ~ James Madison 4
  • 5. Why do ethics matter? • Personal integrity • Individual motivations • “Somebody once said that in looking for people to hire, you look for three qualities: integrity, intelligence, and energy. And if they don’t have the first, the other two will kill you.” ~ Warren Buffett. 5
  • 6. Why do we need to address it today? • Examples of unethical behavior abound • Jeff Neely, GSA • Activities at Abu Ghraib prison • USSS agents activities in Cartagena hotel scandal • FEMA formaldehyde trailers • Enron & Arthur Andersen • Volkswagen “defeat devices” 6
  • 7. Why do we need to address it today? • OPM Survey Responses 7 Source: 2015 Federal Employee Viewpoint Survey “My organization’s senior leaders maintain high standards of honesty and integrity.” Positive Neutral Negative Government-wide 52.3% 24.1% 23.6% Department of Homeland Security 36.8% 23.7% 39.4%
  • 8. Why do we need to address it today? • Sometimes senior officials do not welcome a discussion of ethics or action based on ethics. • Then what do you do? • How do you avoid becoming that senior official? • Whether we like it or not, we are immersed in politics. 8
  • 9. Spotting Ethics Issues • Two kinds of ethics issues: (Kidder (1995)) 1. Moral temptations • Right vs. Wrong • Governed by law or regulation • One right answer • Conflict between moral and immoral values 9
  • 10. Spotting Ethics Issues • Two kinds of ethics issues (cont.): 2. Ethical dilemma • Right vs. Right • Governed by conscience • Two or more right answers • Conflict between moral values 10
  • 11. Spotting Ethics Issues • Are you responsible for addressing an ethics issue? • Squarely on you • Others • Inspector General (Management Directive 0810.1) 11
  • 12. How to Decide • Identify facts and value conflicts • The problem 12
  • 13. How to Decide • Tactics for quiet leaders 1. Don’t kid yourself 2. Trust mixed motives 3. Buy a little time 4. Invest wisely 5. Drill down 6. Nudge, test, and evaluate gradually 7. Craft a compromise 13 Source: Badaracco (2002)
  • 14. How to Decide • Three quiet virtues 1. Restraint 2. Modesty 3. Tenacity 14 Source: Badaracco (2002)
  • 15. How to Decide • Identify options • Avoid common default of assuming an “either-or” answer to all problems • Generate options 15
  • 16. How to Decide • Test your assumptions • Conversational inquiry, not adversarial inquiry • Do it early • Talk to discover, not to persuade • Listen, don’t just formulate arguments 16 Source: Newell (2015)
  • 17. How to Decide • Challenges to ethical behavior 1. Failing to integrate reason and emotion • Don’t kid yourself into thinking that there is no role for emotion • Probe your emotions—what are they telling you? 2. Facts, not just beliefs • Tendency to view facts selectively 3. Allowing status threats to overwhelm good thinking 17 Source: Newell (2015)
  • 18. How to Decide • Challenges to ethical behavior (cont.) 4. Making an ethical decision when taxed and tired • Early in the day • Avoid multi-tasking • Remove distractions 5. Thinking too fast • Slow down • Test assumptions • Discuss with others with an open mind 18 Source: Newell (2015)
  • 19. How to Decide • Challenges to ethical behavior (cont.) 6. Mental biases and heuristics • Confirmation bias • Sunk costs • Anchoring bias • Availability 19 Source: Kahneman, Slovic, and Tversky (1982)
  • 20. How to Decide • Tools to remember • Timing • Ability to remain calm • The power of saying “No” 20
  • 21. Taking Action & Explaining your View • Practice using the right language before presenting • How will you frame your ethical decision (opportunity/reproach) • Think beforehand about how you will be challenged 21
  • 22. Taking Action & Explaining your View • Ethical “enablers” • Under your control • Finding allies • Having all relevant information • Understanding stakeholders • How you select/sequence audiences • Appealing to shared purposes/values • Using your strengths 22 Source: Kiddler (2005)
  • 23. Taking Action & Explaining your View • Ethical “enablers” (cont.) • Within an organization • Organizational policies, practices • Organizational values on ethics, debate, and discussion • Existing mechanisms for open debate and discussion • Systems for raising questions (eg. Ombudsman) • Organizational history of doing the right thing 23
  • 24. Taking Action & Explaining your View • Speaking truth to power • Elements needed for moral courage 1. Must be in service to moral principles 2. Must understand the dangers 3. Endurance • Two things are not enough 24 Source: Kiddler (2005)
  • 25. Taking Action & Explaining your View • Guidelines for loyal dissent 1. Know that dissent tries the patience of superiors—do not do it lightly 2. Do not shoot from the hip. Do your homework 3. Clearly take ownership of your dissent 4. Don’t personalize the challenge 5. Be objective and balanced in your analysis 6. Don’t challenge superiors in public unnecessarily 25 Source: John Johns, Federal Executive Institute
  • 26. Taking Action & Explaining your View • Guidelines for loyal dissent (cont.) 7. Do not expect radical change in opposing views 8. Know your boss 9. Provide alternatives to the position you are challenging 10. Choose your time to challenge 11. Recognize when you have pushed to the limit 12. Always remember that you may be wrong 13. Accept rejection graciously…OR… 26 Source: John Johns, Federal Executive Institute
  • 27. Taking Action & Explaining your View • Final options • Acquiescence • Going over your boss • Requesting reassignment • Whistleblowing • Resign 27 Source: John Johns, Federal Executive Institute
  • 28. Organizations and Ethics • Behavioral norms are powerful forces within an organization • “Normalization of deviance” 28 Source: (Vaughan 1996)
  • 29. Organizations and Ethics • Dangers of hierarchy • Special challenge for large organizations: making sure that decision-makers have all of the relevant information • Tendency in some organizations to contain problems and resolve them at a lower level without passing information up to decision-makers • Specialization and the diffusion of responsibility 29
  • 30. Organizations and Ethics • External pressures can impact ethics • Example: NASA and Challenger catastrophe (1986) • Timing pressures (White House, media, Congress) • Example: FEMA Sandy Litigation • As supervisors and leaders, you need to contain the impact of these pressures—do not just pass them down to subordinates. • Most often, those exerting the pressures will not be the ones held to account for ethical failures. 30
  • 31. Organizations and Ethics • Elements of positive ethical culture • Leadership by example: Employees look to leaders—especially their immediate supervisor—for signals about whether ethics matter. As a supervisor: • Take ethics issues very seriously • Speak to employees about ethical guidelines and their role as an attorney • When facing a tough decision, discuss the ethical dimensions with employees • Clearly express expectations concerning ethical behavior • Model ethical behavior in personal behavior and in work decisions 31 Source: Newell (2015)
  • 32. Organizations and Ethics • Elements of positive ethical culture (cont.) • Encouragement of differences • E.g., USSS Director Clancy testimony • Rewards, sanctions, and peer support 32
  • 33. Pitfalls for Leaders • List of leaders that have faced disgrace because of ethical lapses is long (David Petraeus, Richard Nixon, Bill Clinton, etc.) • The Bathsheba Syndrome • Personal and organizational benefits that come with success can set leaders up for ethical failure  Less or no supervision  Access to people and networks; privileged access  Decision-making power 33 Source: Ludwig & Longnecker (1993)
  • 34. Pitfalls for Leaders • Tactics to avoid ethical traps of leadership • Avoid leadership isolation • Minimize the stress of your job. Live a balanced life. • Do not delegate decisions with major ethics components unless you have high confidence in the ethics of your subordinates. • Understand the dangers of the slippery slope • Commit to ethical action publicly • Others? 34 Source: Newell (2015)
  • 35. Special Rules for Members of the Bar • Model Rule 2.1 • Lawyers are to render independent professional judgment • In rendering advice, a lawyer may refer not only to law, but to other considerations such as moral factors • Model Rule 5.1 • A lawyer having supervisory authority over another lawyer shall make reasonable efforts to ensure that the other lawyer conforms to the Rules of Professional Conduct. 35
  • 36. Special Rules for Members of the Bar • Model Rule 8.4 • It is professional misconduct for a lawyer to engage in conduct involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit, or misrepresentation. • Rule is not limited to the context of lawyer-client relationship; it reaches conduct outside the practice of law. 36
  • 37. Other Points for Discussion? 37
  • 38. Bibliography • Dan Ariely, The (Honest) Truth About Dishonesty (2012). • Joseph Badarraco, Jr., Leading Quietly (2002). • Stuart C. Gilman, Government Ethics: If Only Angels Were to Govern (2003). • Daniel Kahneman, Paul Slovic, and Amos Tversky, Judgment under uncertainty: Heuristics and biases (1982). • Rushworth Kidder, How Good People Make Tough Choices (1995). • Dean Ludwig and Clinton Longnecker, The Bathsheba Syndrome: The Ethical Failure of Successful Leaders, 12 Journal of Business Ethics 265 (1993). • Terry Newell, To Serve with Honor: Doing the Right Thing in Government (2015). • Report of the President’s Commission on the Space Shuttle Challenger Accident (June 6, 1986). (“Rogers Report”) 38