Subornation of perjury is a legal term describing
the crime of persuading another to commit
perjury.
It may be applied to an
attorney who presents
testimony (or an
affidavit) the attorney knows is
materially false to a
judge or
jury as if it were
factual. Generally, the knowledge that the testimony is materially
false must rise above mere
suspicion to
what a reasonable attorney would have believed in the
circumstances. For example, the attorney cannot be
wilfully blind to the fact that their
witness is giving false testimony. An attorney who actively
encourages a witness to give false testimony is clearly guilty of
suborning
perjury. It can occur in either a
civil or
criminal case.
Subornation of perjury is a
crime. It is also
an offense for which an attorney can be disciplined,
disbarred or jailed. Subornation is the
circumstance where an attorney gets, or allows, another party to
lie. If an attorney makes a false representation in court, that is
also a crime and he could be subject to similar punishment as
subornation.
Under
American
federal
criminal law, "Whoever procures another to commit any perjury is
guilty of subornation of perjury, and shall be fined under this
title or imprisoned not more than five years, or both".
Subornation of perjury occurs when anyone--not just a
lawyer--encourages a witness to perjure her/himself. Violators can
face a maximum of five years in prison. That law has analogous
provisions in every state of the union.
The line between subornation of perjury and simply helping
witnesses recall what actually occurred is a fine one.
The best theatrical
example of "wood shedding" (also known as "horse shedding" - for
the locale of the collaboration - or "sand papering") is in the
book and movie Anatomy of a
Murder, which concerns an actual case in the Upper Peninsula
of Michigan
, and written
under the pen-name of Robert Traver, who was Justice John D. Voelker of the Michigan Supreme
Court
. The story graphically demonstrates the
ethical and legal problem.
See also
References
- Garner, Bryan A., Ed., Black's Law Dictionary (7th Ed)
(West Group, St. Paul Minnesota, 1999), p. 1440.
- Horse-shedding at "Quote it completely"
- See Bryan A. Garner, Black's Law Dictionary (7th
Ed.) (West Group, St. Paul Minnesota, 1999), pp. 742, 1342 and
1598.