Delaware Business Court Insider | Commentary
By Barry M. Klayman and Mark E. Felger | June 6, 2018
In TCV VI v. TradingScreen, Vice Chancellor J. Travis Laster addressed the scope of the materials that a lawyer must produce to a former client upon request.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | June 5, 2018
A Lebanon County judge is not backing down from his decision to hit a businessman with a $2.8 million default judgment as a sanction for numerous discovery delays.
By Ben Sexton, JND eDiscovery | June 5, 2018
Increased penalties alone do not appear to be the antidote for bad faith discovery practices, particularly when detection is so difficult. But until changes are made, a few steps can ensure the best outcome possible.
By Samantha Joseph | June 1, 2018
The suit stems from a 2008 agreement with Googles, a children's programming company.
By Zach Warren | May 31, 2018
The acquisition provides a direct answer to the East Asian language barrier problems many U.S.-based e-discovery providers face.
By Zach Warren | May 31, 2018
The acquisition provides a direct answer to the East Asian language barrier problems many U.S.-based e-discovery providers face.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | May 31, 2018
A law firm being sued by a client for allegedly commingling funds must turn over an email that a former employee sent himself regarding potentially suspicious activity related to the firm's trust account, the Pennsylvania Superior Court has ruled.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Leonard Deutchman | May 31, 2018
Because e-discovery opinions involved technical matters that were outside of the understanding of the typical judge or attorney, I observed, such opinions tended to be exciting regardless of the legal issue that underlay them.
By C. Ryan Barber | May 31, 2018
“Discovery also threatens to prejudice individuals who have been or will be indicted, by potentially requiring them to sit for civil depositions despite their privilege against self-incrimination,” Jones Day partner Michael Carvin said in a new filing in Washington's federal trial court.
By C. Ryan Barber | May 31, 2018
'Discovery also threatens to prejudice individuals who have been or will be indicted, by potentially requiring them to sit for civil depositions despite their privilege against self-incrimination,' Jones Day partner Michael Carvin said in a new filing in Washington's federal trial court.
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