Pignatelli was working off his own misdeeds. It's unclear why Haddock decided to turn informant. No one wants to say, and while he's still listed on his firm's website, today's news article quoted above says he's told some people he's in the witness protection program.
From the first article, it seems Williams consulted Haddock in October, 2008 following a traffic stop and the seizure of one of his marijuana loads. Williams wasn't arrested, the driver was, and Williams hired Haddock to represent one of his runners from Omaha. He paid Haddock $8,000. Williams, it turns out, was on supervised release at the time from a crack sentence for which he had served 13 years.
The runner (who was not the driver) and the driver ratted out Williams, who later was arrested on a different pot charge in January, 2009 (after he was found running naked through a park and the cops trailed him to a house that had pot in it.) He posted bond and fled to Minnesota. Enter Haddock: He provides William's cell phone number to the cops who track down Williams, arrest him on a supervised release violation for his crack case and bring him back to jail in Omaha.
So Williams is in the county jail (Omaha doesn't have a federal detention center, they house their detainees at the county jail), arrested for violating his supervised release on his crack conviction.
The cops deny Haddock was helping Williams with his lawsuit to overturn his crack conviction and insist that Haddock was not acting as his counsel, but as a participant in the criminal venture. Williams says he began consulting Haddock before his arrest, while on supervised release.
Who's right? Here's my speculation. Williams has filed several pro se handwritten lawsuits: against jail officials for physically mistreating him, against Haddock's former law firm for Haddock's informing on him, and the one seeking to have his crack sentence and supervised release thrown out.
Here is Williams' handwritten, pro se habeas complaint (pdf)seeking to overturn his crack conviction, filed August 4, 2009. He cites the Klu Klux Act by statute number, its congressional history (referencing Ted Kennedy and Tip O'Neil) and studies presented to Congress showing the disparate effect of the crack laws on African Americans. Seems doubtful he picked that up on his own.
Here is his lawsuit against Haddock's firm filed in December. The handwriting seems different, suggesting to me a "jailhouse lawyer" (another inmate) wrote it for him. Not convinced? Check out his abuse lawsuit, where it seems the jailhouse lawyer began writing it, Williams took over on page 2 to describe what happened to him, and then the jailhouse lawyer takes over at the bottom of page 5 for the conclusion and request for relief. One give-away: Williams capitalizes his small "a"'s and the other guy doesn't. Also, the other guy's writing has a slant to it.
And see the lawsuit against the law firm, Paragraph 6, where it seems to me Williams added the last sentence to the other guy's handwritten paragraph, saying "I" paid Haddock $7,500.
Of course I'm just speculating, but it seems that someone, and not a jailhouse lawyer, helped Williams with the habeas lawsuit about his crack sentence in August, 2009. When was Haddock visiting him? According to William's lawsuit against Haddock's law firm, it was from April 30 to December 17, 2009. I wonder how many times they discussed the lawsuit between April 30 and August 4, 2009.
Even if Haddock told Williams he wasn't representing Williams in the lawsuit, if he gave advice on it, it seems reasonable that Williams would think Haddock was providing legal counsel to him and that they had a privileged relationship. It's not a requirement of the lawyer client privilege that the lawyer officially you in a court proceeding.
Of course, when a lawyer participates in the client's crime, the crime-fraud exception to the attorney-client privilege kicks in and the privilege no longer applies. But it's one thing for the client and lawyer to agree together to violate the law, and another for the cops on their own to get the lawyer to pretend to to agree with the client to violate the law. The latter, even if legal, seems morally bankrupt.
After all, why would Williams trust Haddock with the illegal details of his business? Because he trusted him. Why did he trust him? Because he thought he was his lawyer.
Whether it turns out to be legal or not, it's a really crummy way to make a pot and money laundering case. While I'm not shocked the U.S. Attorney's office and police department used the tactic, I can think of no justifiable excuse for Haddock. Like Pignatelli, he brings shame to the legal profession, and if only one defendant out there reads about Haddock and decides not to trust his or her lawyer with the truth, hindering their lawyer's ability to mount an effective defense, it's one person too many.
Some things are more important than catching drug dealers, and the public's faith in the sanctity of the attorney-client privilege is one of them.