By Tom McParland | December 6, 2021
Any documents produced pursuant to the subpoena, the judge said, would first be subject to in camera review to determine if they should eventually be turned over to the defense.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By H. Christopher Boehning & Daniel J. Toal | December 6, 2021
Decisions like 'Triaxx', discussed by Christopher Boehning and Daniel J. Toal in this edition of their Federal E-Discovery column, demonstrate the versatility of proportionality principles and their potentially wide-ranging applicability in the discovery context.
By Victoria Hudgins | December 6, 2021
The e-discovery industry is facing new opportunities and challenges, from ditching privilege logs to permanently embracing remote review. Two Reed Smith partners debated the merits and downsides of those and other pressing matters.
By Philip Favro, Innovative Driven | December 2, 2021
Courts have issued several recent opinions that provide guidance for how parties should handle the development of privilege log alternatives like metadata logs, categorical logs, and logs reflecting samples of privileged documents.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Leonard Deutchman | November 24, 2021
The thesis of the article is not that e-discovery has somehow evaporated, but rather that the thinking in the legal world regarding e-discovery has so changed that, as with many other ideas (and the tools that helped those ideas to flourish) that were once novel—that communications could travel thousands of miles over telephone lines.
By Andrew Goudsward | November 22, 2021
"This is a battle between the office of the former president and the select committee involving the issue of executive privilege," Bannon's defense lawyer Robert Costello said in an interview. "We are mere spectators here."
By Jasmine Floyd | November 19, 2021
"This case is a wakeup call that attorneys can't demonstrate less than the highest standards of conduct, even in informal or electronic proceedings," said Barry Rigby, the lawyer's defense counsel.
By Allison Dunn | November 19, 2021
Judge Amy Totenberg of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia previously characterized the emails as containing "inadvisable 'hot takes,'" "inflammatory remarks," and "clear preferences for policy outcomes."
By Allison Dunn | November 19, 2021
Judge Amy Totenberg of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia previously characterized the emails as containing "inadvisable 'hot takes,'" "inflammatory remarks," and "clear preferences for policy outcomes."
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By The Associated Press | November 16, 2021
Middletown Township has been refusing to produce the records for nearly a year, asserting they were exempt from disclosure under the state's open records law.
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