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By Sue Reisinger | February 24, 2020
Google had sought to limit what discovery documents could be seen by outside experts in investigations brought by state attorneys general before the company reached an agreement last week on narrower limitations.
1 minute read
By Sue Reisinger | February 24, 2020
Google had sought to limit what discovery documents could be seen by outside experts in investigations brought by state attorneys general before the company reached an agreement last week on narrower limitations.
1 minute read
By Angela Turturro | February 20, 2020
This essay is a "step back" from the author's tenure in different roles at the Court of Appeals spanning the last quarter of the last century. The reminiscences recounted here, however, are from his more recent endeavors as a witness in various cases.
1 minute read
By Greg Land | February 13, 2020
"Who exactly, sir, should I have requested authority of," the judge asked prosecutors over the installation of a monitoring device on her courthouse computer.
1 minute read
By Joseph W. Bellacosa | February 13, 2020
This essay is a "step back" from the author's tenure in different roles at the Court of Appeals spanning the last quarter of the last century. The reminiscences recounted here, however, are from his more recent endeavors as a witness in various cases.
1 minute read
By Ross Todd | February 11, 2020
A federal judge excluded Louis Freeh's expert opinion that the government's criminal case, which involved VW paying a $2.8 billion fine in 2017, settled too cheaply. The ruling mooted VW's motion to disqualify Freeh based on his earlier pitch to work for VW in the wake of its diesel emissions scandal.
1 minute read
By David B. Newman and Matthew L. Lippert | February 6, 2020
The intersection of specialized, often highly technical, or esoteric subject matter with procedural freedom can result in confusion about the ground rules for the use of experts in the arbitration.
1 minute read
By Joseph W. Bellacosa | February 6, 2020
This essay is a "step back" from the author's tenure in different roles at the Court of Appeals spanning the last quarter of the last century. The reminiscences recounted here, however, are from his more recent endeavors as a witness in various cases.
1 minute read
By Robert Storace | January 28, 2020
A Superior Court jury returned a seven-figure verdict in favor of a man who sued Bristol Hospital for medical malpractice, alleging a nurse injured him while administering an enema.
1 minute read
By Jules Epstein | January 22, 2020
According to a September 2019 ruling, the "may" finding is the limit. "The government's expert may testify that based on his examination, the recovered firearm cannot be excluded as the source of the cartridge casing found on the scene of the alleged shooting."
1 minute read
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