Reflections on Fraud and Lawyer Ethics

Michael Ambrosio, Professor of Law, Seton Hall University School of Law

Fraud is an intrinsic wrong that has an infinite variety of forms. The problem of fraud is endemic to a market economy. Common law legal and equitable doctrines have been used by courts for centuries to provide remedies for fraud. Legislation regulating and policing the marketplace has sought to prevent fraud by imposing criminal or civil sanctions on its perpetrators. Every state has a consumer fraud statute for the pursuit of public and private remedies. Despite a host of state and federal statutes and common law remedies dealing with the problem of fraud, it continues to be a major social problem. The Association of Criminal Fraud Examiners reported that more than $4.7 trillion is lost annually to occupational fraud worldwide.

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USA Ethics General June 2023 Vol.16, No. 63, Spring 2023

Michael Ambrosio

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Professor of Law Seton Hall Law School 1970-present Visiting Professor Southwestern Univ. Law Schooll. 1976-77 Director, Law in Italy 1990-2001

Seton Hall University School of Law

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Seton Hall Law School is located in Newark, N.J. It was founded in1950

USA Ethics General June 2023 Vol.16, No. 63, Spring 2023