The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Aleeza Furman | August 22, 2022
The pharma company's petition raises questions as to who will lead the defense team in the matter, which has already been criticized as progressing at a slow pace.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Emily Cousins | August 17, 2022
"Attorney Pattis sent me a text saying, 'I or my office may have violated the order of protection,'" lawyer Christopher Mattei said.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Emily Cousins | August 16, 2022
"There is no way they should've ever be dropped in this document dump that happened in the Texas case," law professor Julia Simon-Kerr said. "It's a totally separate case, different lawyers. Very inappropriate."
By Staci Kaliner, Monica McCarroll and Ben Barnes, Redgrave LLP | August 11, 2022
One topic has recently been dominating e-discovery conversations: the discovery challenges posed by "modern attachments" within the Microsoft 365 (M365) environment. This first article of a series examines what "modern attachments" are and why they are keeping e-discovery practitioners up at night.
By Ariyah Mandel, Gulfstream Legal | August 8, 2022
Legal professionals often anticipate having to listen to or watch hundreds of hours of tape, if not more, in order to find and analyze the relevant passages in discovery. But as the first part of this series on special e-discovery files reveals, tactics exist to streamline the workflow for locating, sorting and examining audio and video materials.
By Jane Wester | August 5, 2022
Defense counsel, led by Barry Berke, were responding to prosecutors' argument that there was "nothing nefarious about the government's interactions with [real estate developer Gerald] Migdol or his lawyers."
By Brad Kutner | August 4, 2022
The motion was filed after a damning day of testimony when texts from the phone were used against Jones while he testified.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By H. Christopher Boehning and Daniel J. Toal | August 1, 2022
In 'Tireboots v. Tiresocks', instead of submitting a request for production of certain materials, the requesting party asked to directly access the responding parties' systems through forensic examination. The court ultimately denied this request, finding it was not proportional to the needs of the case.
By Tara Emory, Redgrave Data, and Nick Snavely and Martin Tully, Redgrave LLP | July 28, 2022
The latest opinion in the discovery saga of DR Distributors reflects the limits of orders under Federal Rule of Evidence 502(d), application of marital communications privilege, and some cautionary lessons about inconsistent redactions and defending a privilege review process.
By Brian Lee | July 28, 2022
The holdouts have left a combined $4.18 million on the table thus far, according to figures from the Division of Criminal Justice Services. A total of $34.5 million has been disbursed, the state agency said.
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