Master New York court dismissed a criminal indictment against a defense lawyer who, to preserve client confidences, did not disclose the location and condition of a homicide victim's body learned through privileged communications. with this comprehensive case brief.
People v. Belge is a foundational case at the intersection of criminal defense ethics, the attorney–client privilege, and statutory duties imposed by the state concerning the reporting of deaths. It arose from a notorious upstate New York homicide investigation in which defense counsel learned, through confidential communications with their client, the locations of additional victims' bodies. The lawyers personally confirmed at least one site and took photographs to verify their client's statements but refused to disclose their knowledge to authorities during the representation. Public outrage followed, and a prosecutor charged one of the attorneys with violating state laws requiring information to be furnished to death investigators.
The court dismissed the indictment, holding that the attorney–client privilege and the client's Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel shielded the lawyer from criminal liability for protecting confidences about past crimes when no ongoing danger existed. Belge is widely taught because it squarely addresses whether a lawyer's ethical and constitutional duties to a client can trump a general statutory obligation to assist the state in investigating death—highlighting the hard line between moral intuitions and the structural safeguards of the adversary system.
People v. Belge, 83 Misc. 2d 186, 372 N.Y.S.2d 798 (Onondaga Cty. Ct. 1975), aff'd, 50 A.D.2d 1088, 376 N.Y.S.2d 771 (4th Dep't 1975)
In 1973, defense attorneys representing a homicide suspect learned through confidential communications that their client had killed additional victims and disclosed the locations of their bodies. Acting in the course of their representation, the attorneys visited at least one site, observed human remains in an advanced state of decomposition, and documented what they saw (including by photographs) to verify and preserve information for potential use in the defense. They did not inform law enforcement or medical authorities of the locations or their observations, reasoning that the information derived from privileged attorney–client communications concerning completed crimes, that no imminent threat to life existed, and that disclosure would compromise the client's constitutional right to effective assistance of counsel and privilege-guarded candor. After the client's case became public and additional victims were eventually discovered by authorities, substantial public criticism followed. A local district attorney obtained an indictment against one of the defense attorneys, Francis Belge, alleging violations of New York statutes requiring the reporting of deaths and the furnishing of information to death investigators. Belge moved to dismiss.
May the State criminally prosecute a defense attorney for failing to disclose the location and condition of a homicide victim's body when the attorney learned that information solely through confidential attorney–client communications about past crimes and disclosed nothing to prevent ongoing harm?
The attorney–client privilege protects confidential communications made by a client to a lawyer for the purpose of obtaining legal advice, and the Sixth Amendment guarantees the right to effective assistance of counsel. Absent an applicable exception (such as disclosure authorized to prevent a prospective crime or imminent death or substantial bodily harm), a lawyer may not disclose client confidences relating to representation. Statutes of general application should not be construed or applied to compel disclosure of privileged information or to criminalize a lawyer's adherence to confidentiality in a way that undermines the client's constitutional right to counsel.
The court dismissed the indictment. Applying the attorney–client privilege and the client's Sixth Amendment right to counsel, the court held that the State could not criminally prosecute defense counsel for refusing to disclose information about the location and condition of a body learned solely through privileged communications concerning past crimes when no ongoing danger existed.
The court reasoned that the bedrock of the attorney–client relationship—particularly in criminal defense—is the client's ability to speak candidly with counsel without fear that the lawyer will become a witness against the client. If lawyers could be prosecuted for honoring confidentiality concerning past crimes, clients would be deterred from full disclosure, impairing counsel's ability to investigate facts, provide accurate legal advice, and mount an effective defense, thereby undermining the Sixth Amendment. The statutory duties invoked by the prosecution were general public health measures directed at those with custodial responsibility for remains or independent obligations to report; they were not designed to displace constitutional guarantees or to conscript defense counsel as agents of the State during ongoing representation. The court noted that no exception to confidentiality applied: the information concerned completed homicides, and there was no imminent threat to life or risk of ongoing harm that might justify or require disclosure. Moreover, the acts taken by counsel—visiting and documenting the site to verify the client's account—were investigative steps within the protective ambit of the representation and did not transform the lawyer into a criminal actor. To permit prosecution on these facts would chill zealous advocacy and impermissibly intrude on the adversarial system's structural protections. Balancing the State's interest in death investigation against constitutional and evidentiary protections, the court concluded the indictment could not stand.
Belge is a staple in Professional Responsibility and Criminal Procedure courses because it concretely frames the tension between moral intuitions and the legal system's commitment to confidentiality and zealous defense. It teaches that: (1) confidentiality regarding past crimes is robust, (2) lawyers cannot be turned into witnesses against their clients through general statutes, (3) exceptions to confidentiality are narrow and focus on preventing future or imminent harm, and (4) courts will construe or limit statutes to avoid infringing the Sixth Amendment and the privilege. The case also provides a comparative anchor for later authorities addressing lawyers' handling of physical evidence and crime scenes, and it underscores that disciplinary rules and constitutional doctrine can converge to protect core defense functions even amid public outrage.
Both. The court emphasized that the attorney–client privilege shields confidential communications about past crimes and that the client's Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance requires protecting the confidentiality necessary for candid consultation. The two doctrines reinforced each other: punishing counsel for honoring privilege would chill client candor and impair the right to counsel.
Very likely. Most ethics regimes (including New York's and the Model Rules) recognize exceptions permitting or requiring disclosure to prevent reasonably certain death or substantial bodily harm, or to prevent a future crime. Belge involved information about completed homicides with no ongoing threat. If imminent harm existed, a disclosure exception could apply and the balance of interests would shift.
Many courts treat possession or alteration of physical evidence differently from mere knowledge derived from client communications. While privileged communications remain protected, lawyers who take possession of or alter physical evidence may trigger duties to turn it over or risk obstruction charges. Belge is best read as protecting confidentiality about past crimes and counsel's observational investigation, not as blanket immunity for handling physical evidence.
Yes. The Appellate Division, Fourth Department, affirmed the dismissal. No opinion from New York's highest court altered the outcome. The case therefore stands in New York as trial-level reasoning affirmed on appeal, frequently cited in ethics discussions and casebooks.
Belge predates the Model Rules but aligns with two core principles now reflected in Model Rule 1.6 (confidentiality) and Model Rule 3.4 (fairness to opposing party and counsel). Model Rule 1.6 generally prohibits revealing information relating to the representation absent client consent or an applicable exception (e.g., preventing reasonably certain death). Model Rule 3.4 limits a lawyer's ability to obstruct access to evidence. Belge underscores that, where no exception applies and counsel has not obstructed evidence, confidentiality prevails.
No. While Belge protects confidentiality regarding completed crimes absent an applicable exception, disclosure may be permitted or required under specific circumstances (e.g., to prevent reasonably certain death, comply with a court order after contesting it, or defend the lawyer against certain allegations). The case confirms that absent such an exception, criminal prosecution for honoring confidentiality is impermissible.
People v. Belge crystallizes the legal system's commitment to the attorney–client privilege and the Sixth Amendment even in the face of intense public pressure. By dismissing a prosecution that sought to punish a defense lawyer for not revealing privileged information about completed crimes, the court preserved the candid attorney–client dialogue essential to effective defense advocacy and a fair adversarial process.
For law students, Belge is a cautionary and clarifying precedent: ethics may require lawyers to endure public criticism when the law mandates confidentiality. It is also a doctrinal anchor for understanding how courts balance general statutory duties against constitutional protections, and how narrow exceptions—focused on preventing future harm or addressing physical evidence—define the outer limits of confidentiality in criminal practice.
Need to cite this case?
Generate a perfectly formatted Bluebook citation in seconds.
Use our Bluebook Citation Generator →