By Greg Land | February 7, 2019
The verdict followed a month-long trial and is the first time the Cook IVC has been found defective in one of thousands of cases consolidated in multidistrict litigation in Indiana district court.
By Greg Land | February 7, 2019
The verdict followed a month-long trial and is the first time the Cook IVC has been found defective in one of thousands of cases consolidated in multidistrict litigation in Indiana district court.
By R. Robin McDonald | February 7, 2019
Judge Timothy Batten of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia threw out claims by a former Kennesaw State University cheerleader against a powerful former legislator and the county sheriff, finding that the defendants' "only discernible motive was their view that the flag and the anthem should be respected."
Daily Business Review | Analysis
By Steven A. Meyerowitz | February 7, 2019
A federal magistrate in West Palm Beach finds an insurance company didn't waive attorney-client privilege on documents even when litigation wasn't anticipated.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Steven A. Meyerowitz | February 6, 2019
A federal district court in Pennsylvania has remanded an insurance coverage case to state court after deciding that the defendant insurer should have known that the amount in controversy exceeded $75,000 from the insureds' complaint and, therefore, that its removal months after the complaint was filed was untimely.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Michael J. Hutter | February 6, 2019
Evidence columnist Michael J. Hutter discusses two statutory provisions enacted by the Legislature in 2018 which address the authentication process concerning a certain type and category of offered evidence with the express intent to make the process easier as to that evidence.
By Victoria Hudgins | February 6, 2019
A recent decision from the state's Supreme Court may have opened the floodgates for plaintiffs' filings and class actions over improperly collected biometric data.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Howard J. Bashman | February 4, 2019
This column focuses on what appellate judges agree is ordinarily the most important part of the appellate process—the parties' briefs on appeals.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Elliott Scheinberg | February 4, 2019
While many post-amendment cases track the language in §5513 that a “notice of appeal must be filed and served within 30 days after service by a party of the order and written notice of entry,” diligent research revealed no direct post-amendment case law on this specific point.
By Julia Brickell | February 1, 2019
It is well past time for lawyers to put aside the notion that legal prowess is sufficient. Forward-thinking counsel must constantly inquire about the impact and efficacy of increasingly powerful technologies and align with those who have requisite expertise—be it in security or statistics or computer science or data science or some other aspect.
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