The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. D'Annunzio | August 9, 2018
"In the Facebook posts and in the portion of Mrs. Allen's deposition relied upon by defendant in support of their motion, there is nothing to suggest the unreliability of Mrs. Allen's claims with respect to the nature and scope of her injury, as none of the activities referenced show or suggest the strenuous use of her right shoulder," Judge Craig Dally said.
By Christopher Boehning and Daniel J. Toal | August 6, 2018
In their Federal E-Discovery column, H. Christopher Boehning and Daniel J. Toal write: In 2016, scant direction existed for organizations looking to structure a “Bring Your Own Device” program with e-discovery requirements in mind, and there was even less guidance for courts confronted with requests for discovery of ESI on such devices. That has changed thanks to a new publication from The Sedona Conference.
Daily Report Online | Commentary
By Edwin Schklar and Maggie M. Heim | August 6, 2018
One consequence of outsourcing document review is that it might defeat your ultimate goal of winning or achieving a great settlement. Another consequence is that it might cost your business more money in the end.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Lizzy McLellan | August 3, 2018
Towers Watson & Co. is appealing an order from June, in which the court granted in part Morgan Lewis' motion to compel.
By Andrew Denney | August 1, 2018
A former reality TV show star who has claimed succession rights for her late mother's rent-regulated Brooklyn apartment must produce social media posts from the two years leading up to her mother's death, a Housing Court judge found.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Michael E. Gertzman and Michael J. Pernick | August 1, 2018
Michael E. Gertzman and Michael J. Pernick, in a column on International Litigation, write about how the Second Circuit changed the analysis of whether to review an overseas client's documents here or abroad.
By Stephen Treglia | July 30, 2018
In his E-Communications column, Stephen Treglia writes: Late last month, SCOTUS issued its most far-reaching expansion of the right to privacy in over 50 years in Carpenter v. United States. While not completely abandoning legal precedent that had been black-letter law, it is most certainly the first injection of the color gray.
By Zach Schlein | July 25, 2018
A Florida appellate court Wednesday upheld a ruling ordering the Broward Sheriff's Office and School Board of Broward County to release surveillance video from the Valentine's Day mass shooting that claimed 17 lives at Marjorie Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida.
By Ellis Kim | July 25, 2018
Prosecutors asked for a protection order Wednesday before turning over documents to the attorney representing Maria Butina, citing his frequent cable news appearances.
By Rhys Dipshan | July 25, 2018
By using technology assisted review (TAR) and new machine learning techniques like CAL, even the review of small foreign language document sets, with sparse relevant documents, can be automated.
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