High Court quashes bid to shield advocates from arrest, prosecution while on duty


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The High Court has thrown out a petition by the Law Society
of Kenya (LSK) seeking to shield advocates from arrest, prosecution, or
harassment while discharging their professional duties.
Filed in 2019, the petition accused the Director of Public
Prosecutions (DPP), the Inspector-General of Police, and other state agencies
of intimidating lawyers, compelling disclosure of confidential client
information, and detaining them beyond the constitutional 24-hour limit.
LSK sought orders requiring police to release advocates on
free bond and to exhaust disciplinary procedures under the Advocates Act before
preferring criminal charges.
Justice Lawrence Mugambi ruled that the petition was
“fatally defective,” citing a lack of specificity and failure to identify any
individual advocates whose rights had been infringed.
He said the case relied on broad, unsubstantiated claims
rather than concrete incidents.
While affirming LSK’s standing to bring the suit, the court
noted that the advocate–client privilege is not absolute.
Under the Evidence Act, privilege does not apply to
communications made in furtherance of an illegal purpose, or where an advocate
is aware of a crime or fraud.
The judge stressed that advocates, like all citizens, are
subject to investigation and prosecution if evidence of wrongdoing exists,
adding that any interference with their work should be assessed on a
case-by-case basis, not through blanket protections.
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