If your attorney is consulting on your case with another attorney or firm, they can share the information necessary to do the job you hired them for. If you do not believe that this is the case, then this question needs to be addressed to your State Bar Association who is the the body that polices the ethics of the attorneys in your state.
Too much of a theoretical question. You'll have retain an attorney to find out what the charge(s) against you is, and then go from there.
The privilege doesn't apply if another person is involved in the communication, if the client tells the attorney about a future illegal act (NOT past crimes), or in some cases if the information is being used against someone other than the client.
Attorney
Ask them why they are delaying it. They may have some good valid plan or legal reason for doing so. If not, and they are going against your wishes, replace them with another attorney.
The best bet is to start by talking to your attorney. (S)he may have a valid reason. If the reason is useless, then I would start by finding another attorney. File a grievance w/ the local bar and possibly file suit against the first attorney. BEFORE you do any of that though, you should probably talk to another attorney about filing a Motion to Reinstate Stay.
An individual can file for a lien in court, but only the court can award a lien against another party.
Well another words for prosecutor are DA, district attorney, prosecuting attorney, etc.
File a complaint with the State Supreme Court, not the bar association, which is just an attorneys club.
Do not oppose means to not to talk when he is stating his arguments unless the attorney is harassing the client of another attorney. Thou that is not a good for close.
Maybe. You should contact a local attorney for the best information.
another word for general is average not the same but different
No they cannot. There is a prohibition against making a will for another person, even if they have given you power of attorney. They can request to be appointed executors once the mother has passed away.