http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2005/7/26/115428/490<SNIP>
(T)his case grew out of a subpoena that the independent counsel issued for notes that were taken of conversations between Hillary Rodham Clinton and White House attorneys in preparation for grand jury appearances and congressional appearances. The Office of the President asserted an attorney-client privilege. The District Court accepted in a kind of odd way, saying that Mrs. Clinton thought there was one at the time, and therefore she is entitled to rely on it. The Eighth Circuit reversed and said there is no attorney-client privilege for the First Lady or any other government official who consults with government counsel as opposed to private counsel.</SNIP>
Here is an interesting take from Joe DiGenova
http://www.digenovatoensing.com/inthenews/No_Client_Atty_Privilege.htm<SNIP>
The first thing to remember in considering President Clinton's refusal last week to comply with a Senate Whitewater Committee's subpoena for notes from a 1993 meeting between his personal lawyers and White House attorneys, is that the U.S. Congress is not a court of law. Congress's power to investigate is almost unfettered; no court has ever ruled that attorney-client privilege applies in congressional hearings.
It's hard to imagine how Mr. Clinton could win the court case that is about to ensue; the law and tradition of congressional investigations are simply not on his side. Since the founding of the republic, Congress has consistently maintained that the privilege "cannot be claimed as a matter of right before a legislative committee," as a congressional study put it in the mid-'80s - though it occasionally may do so as a matter of courtesy. It has based this view on English common law and parliamentary history, as well as on congressional tradition. Most important of all, both houses of Congress have declined to adopt changes to their chambers' standing rules to incorporate any specific recognition of attorney-client privilege.</SNIP>
Hmmm, I wonder what ol' Joe would write today. Well, not really, I know exactly what he would write.
Jay
EDITED TO ADD DiGenova COMMENTARY