MTC:  The Lawyer's Digital "Go Bag" — Preparing for the Unthinkable Termination

lawyers, are you ready for an untimely departure from your firm?

When a lawyer's career ends abruptly—whether through firm dissolution, partnership disputes, or sudden termination—the ethical obligations don't disappear with the pink slip. In fact, they intensify. The concept of a digital "go bag," popularized in corporate America as preparation for unexpected layoffs, takes on unique complexity in the legal profession, where client confidentiality, file ownership, and professional responsibility rules create a minefield of competing obligations.

Unlike other professionals who might download work samples or contacts before losing access, lawyers face stringent ethical constraints that make preparing for career disruption both essential and precarious.

Understanding the Legal Professional's Dilemma

The traditional digital go bag includes personal documents, performance reviews, professional contacts, and work samples. For lawyers, however, the landscape is far more treacherous. Everything in a lawyer's professional sphere potentially involves client confidentiality, creating ethical tripwires that don't exist in other professions.

When lawyers are terminated or leave firms, they cannot simply walk away with client files or even copies of their own work product if it contains client information. The ABA Model Rules create a web of continuing obligations that persist long after the employment relationship has ended.

The Ethical Framework Governing Lawyer Departures

Rule 1.6 — The Confidentiality Fortress

Rule 1.6 of the ABA Model Rules establishes that lawyers must protect client confidentiality indefinitely—even after termination or departure. This duty extends to:

  • All communications with clients;

  • Information learned during representation;

  • Strategic discussions about client matters;

  • Any data that could harm the client if disclosed.

The rule provides extremely limited exceptions, none of which include "I got fired and need this for my portfolio".

Rule 1.15 — Safeguarding Client Property

Under Rule 1.15, lawyers hold client files as property belonging to the client, not the lawyer. When employment ends, lawyers must:

  • Return client files to the firm or client immediately;

  • Surrender any client property in their possession;

  • Refrain from taking copies without explicit authorization.

The Texas State Bar's Ethics Opinion on departing lawyers is particularly stark: attorneys who delete client files from firm systems or take the only copies face potential disciplinary action under Rule 8.4 for dishonesty and deceit.

Rule 1.9 — Former Client Protections

Rule 1.9 extends confidentiality protections to former clients, meaning lawyers cannot use or disclose information learned during representation to harm former clients. This creates ongoing obligations that can span decades after a matter concludes.

What CAN Lawyers Legally Preserve?

Given these constraints, what can lawyers ethically include in their digital go bag? The answer is disappointingly narrow:

Personal Career Documents

  • Performance reviews and evaluations;

  • Salary statements and benefits records;

  • Bar admission certificates and CLE records;

  • Non-client-related correspondence with colleagues;

  • General firm policies and procedures.

Professional Development Materials

  • CLE certificates and continuing education records;

  • Bar memberships and professional association documents;

  • Personal networking contacts (non-client);

  • Industry articles and legal research (publicly available).

Limited Work Samples ⚠️

  • Publicly filed pleadings (already in public record);

  • Published articles or speeches (with proper attribution);

  • General legal forms or templates (non-client specific);

  • Redacted work samples (with all client identifying information removed).

Strictly Prohibited

  • Client files or any portion thereof;

  • Internal case strategy memos;

  • Client contact lists or information;

  • Billing records or time entries;

  • Any document containing client confidential information.

The Dangerous Middle Ground

The most perilous category involves documents that seem personal but contain client information. Consider these scenarios:

Email correspondence: Even emails that appear administrative may reference client matters, making them potentially confidential.

Calendar entries: Meeting notes and appointment records often contain client-privileged information.

Internal reports: Performance reviews that reference specific client matters or outcomes may violate confidentiality rules.

Contact lists: Professional networks built through client relationships cannot be extracted without ethical concerns.

Building an Ethically Compliant Digital Go Bag

Before Trouble Hits

Smart lawyers should prepare their digital go bag while still employed:

  1. Separate personal from professional: Use personal email accounts for career-related correspondence that doesn't involve client matters;

  2. Document your achievements carefully: Keep records of professional accomplishments without referencing client specifics;

  3. Maintain external professional networks: Build relationships through bar associations and professional groups, not just through client work;

  4. Create a non-client portfolio: Develop writing samples, CLE presentations, and other materials that showcase your skills without client data.

Emergency Protocols

If termination occurs suddenly:

  1. Don't panic-download: Resist the urge to grab files before losing access—this can lead to disciplinary action;

  2. Focus on truly personal items: Performance reviews, salary records, and personal correspondence only;

  3. Document the departure: Keep records of your termination notice and final communications for potential unemployment or wrongful termination claims;

  4. Consult ethics counsel immediately: Many state bars offer ethics hotlines for lawyers facing urgent professional responsibility questions.

Post-Departure Obligations

After leaving a firm, lawyers must:

  • Avoid using former client information: Cannot leverage previous client relationships or confidential information in new positions;

  • Maintain confidentiality indefinitely: The duty to protect client information never expires;

  • Cooperate with file transfers: Help ensure smooth transitions for ongoing client matters.

Special Considerations for Solos, Small, and Mid-Size Firms

Smaller firm lawyers face unique challenges:

Solo Practitioners

  • Own their client relationships but still must protect confidentiality when joining new firms;

  • May have limited resources for ethics consultation during crisis situations;

  • Often lack HR departments to guide appropriate departure procedures.

Small Firm Associates

  • May have developed direct client relationships that complicate file ownership issues;

  • Often handle multiple matters simultaneously, making clean departures more complex;

  • May face partner pressure to bring clients to new firms, creating ethical dilemmas.

Mid-Size Firm Lawyers

  • Navigate complex partnership agreements that may restrict post-departure activities;

  • Deal with sophisticated conflicts systems that track potential ethical violations;

  • Face partnership compensation structures that incentivize aggressive client development.

The Technology Trap

Modern law practice creates new ethical pitfalls. Cloud-based files, encrypted communications, and mobile devices blur the lines between personal and professional data. Lawyers must consider:

  • Automatic backups: Personal devices may automatically sync firm data;

  • Password management: Work-related passwords stored in personal managers;

  • Social media connections: Professional networks developed through client work;

  • Digital forensics: Firm IT systems may track all file access and downloads.

Practical Steps for Ethical Compliance

Regular Maintenance

  1. Annual digital cleanup: Review and properly categorize all professional documents;

  2. Ethics policy review: Stay current on your jurisdiction's professional responsibility rules;

  3. Malpractice consultation: Discuss departure scenarios with your professional liability insurer;

  4. Emergency contacts: Maintain relationships with ethics attorneys for urgent consultation.

Documentation Protocols

  1. Written policies: Develop clear protocols for handling departures and file transfers;

  2. Client communication: Establish procedures for notifying clients of attorney departures;

  3. Confidentiality agreements: Ensure all firm personnel understand their ongoing obligations;

  4. Regular training: Update lawyers and staff on current ethical requirements.

The High Stakes Reality

The consequences of getting this wrong extend far beyond mere employment disputes. Lawyers who improperly handle client information during departures face:

  • Disciplinary sanctions: Suspension or disbarment for ethical violations;

  • Malpractice liability: Potential lawsuits from harmed clients or former firms;

  • Criminal prosecution: Computer fraud charges for unauthorized data access;

  • Professional reputation damage: Ethics violations become public record in most jurisdictions.

Final Thoughts: Moving Forward Ethically.

walk away from your last job with dignity and your mandated ethics in tact!

The legal profession's emphasis on client protection means lawyers must accept that their digital go bags will be far more limited than those of other professionals. This isn't a flaw in the system—it's a feature that protects the attorney-client relationship that forms the foundation of effective legal representation.

Rather than viewing these restrictions as burdens, successful lawyers should see them as competitive advantages. Lawyers who build their reputations on ethical compliance, professional competence, and client service create sustainable careers that weather employment disruptions more effectively than those who rely on quick-fix strategies or ethical corner-cutting.

The most important item in any lawyer's digital go bag isn't a document or file—it's an unwavering commitment to professional responsibility that opens doors even when others close unexpectedly.