A lawyer should participate in serving those persons, or groups of persons, who are unable to pay all or a portion of reasonable attorney’s fees or who are otherwise unable to obtain counsel. A lawyer may discharge this responsibility by providing professional services at no fee, or at a substantially reduced fee, to persons and groups who are unable to afford or obtain counsel, or by active participation in the work of organizations that provide legal services to them. When personal representation is not feasible, a lawyer may discharge this responsibility by providing financial support for organizations that provide legal representation to those unable to obtain counsel.
Comment
[1] This Rule reflects the long-standing ethical
principle underlying Canon 2 of the previous Code of Professional Responsibility
that "A lawyer should assist the legal profession in fulfilling
its duty to make legal counsel available." The Rule incorporates
the legal profession’s historical commitment to the principle that all
persons in our society should be able to obtain necessary legal services.
The Rule also recognizes that the rights and responsibilities of individuals
and groups in the United States are increasingly defined in legal terms
and that, as a consequence, legal assistance in coping with the web
of statutes, rules, and regulations is imperative for persons of modest
and limited means, as well as for the relatively well-to-do. The Rule
also recognizes that a lawyer’s pro bono services are sometimes needed
to assert or defend public rights belonging to the public generally
where no individual or group can afford to pay for the services.
[2] This Rule carries forward the ethical precepts
set forth in the Code. Specifically, the Rule recognizes that the basic
responsibility for providing legal services for those unable to pay
ultimately rests upon the individual lawyer, and that every lawyer,
regardless of professional prominence or professional work load, should
find time to participate in or otherwise support the provision of legal
services to the disadvantaged.
[3] The Rule also acknowledges that while the provision
of free legal services to those unable to pay reasonable fees continues
to be an obligation of each lawyer as well as the profession generally,
the efforts of individual lawyers are often not enough to meet the need.
Thus, it has been necessary for the profession and government to institute
additional programs to provide legal services. Accordingly, legal aid
offices, lawyer referral services, and other related programs have been
developed, and others will be developed by the profession and government.
Every lawyer should support all proper efforts to meet this need for
legal services. A lawyer also should not refuse a request from a court
or bar association to undertake representation of a person unable to
obtain counsel except for compelling reasons such as those listed in
Rule 6.2.
[4] This Rule expresses the profession’s traditional
commitment to make legal counsel available, but it is not intended that
the Rule be enforced through disciplinary process. Neither is it intended
to place any obligation on a government lawyer that is inconsistent
with laws such as 18 U.S.C. §§ 203 and 205 limiting the scope
of permissible employment or representational activities.
[5] In determining their responsibilities under this
Rule, lawyers admitted to practice in the District of Columbia should
be guided by the Resolutions on Pro Bono Services passed by the Judicial
Conferences of the District of Columbia and the D.C. Circuit as amended
from time to time. Those resolutions as adopted in 1997 and 1998, respectively,
call on members of the D.C. Bar, as a minimum, each year to (1) accept
one court appointment, (2) provide 50 hours of pro bono legal service,
or (3) when personal representation is not feasible, contribute the
lesser of $400 or 1 percent of earned income to a legal assistance organization
that services the community’s economically disadvantaged, including
pro bono referral and appointment offices sponsored by the Bar and the
courts.




