By Zach Warren | June 9, 2020
The flagship Chicago conference for e-discovery provider Relativity will move to online-only following the COVID-19 pandemic, keeping its same dates of Sept. 21-23.
By Sarah M. Lucey | June 4, 2020
A recent California Supreme Court decision offers guidance, but no a bright line rule for a crucial issue in the case: What agency processes do, and do not, qualify as "data extraction," the costs of which agencies may permissibly shift to requesters?
By Sarah M. Lucey, Shute, Mihaly & Weinberger | June 4, 2020
A recent California Supreme Court decision offers a bright line rule for a crucial issue in the case: What agency processes do, and do not, qualify as "data extraction," the costs of which agencies may permissibly shift to requesters?
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By H. Christopher Boehning and Daniel J. Toal | June 1, 2020
A district court recently found some actions taken while under a duty to preserve indicative of intentional spoliation, including the company and CEO's use of ephemeral messaging, the failure to disable auto-deletion of emails, and the reformatting and other spoliation of devices allegedly used to transfer trade secret information. In their Federal E-Discovery column, H. Christopher Boehning and Daniel J. Toal discuss how the clearly frustrated court issued case terminating sanctions for this "staggering" discovery misconduct.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Barry Kamins | June 1, 2020
In the midst of an historic pandemic, the Legislature enacted amendments to sweeping legislation it had enacted last year: limitations on monetary bail; expansion of discovery in criminal cases; and the enhancement of the right to a statutory speedy trial. In his Criminal Law and Procedure column, Barry Kamins reviews the most significant aspects of the changes.
By David Parnall | May 29, 2020
How far can a deposing attorney go in requesting the deponent to reveal the world of information at the deponent's fingertips?
Delaware Business Court Insider | Analysis
By Victoria Hudgins | May 27, 2020
E-discovery lawyers caution that, while the discovery process is similar across any litigation, bankruptcy proceedings require quicker turnarounds and more challenging data handling procedures.
By Victoria Hudgins | May 27, 2020
E-discovery lawyers caution that, while the discovery process is similar across any litigation, bankruptcy proceedings require quicker turnarounds and more challenging data handling procedures.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By John Siegal | May 21, 2020
The pandemic is rapidly forcing changes in lawyer behavior and lifestyle that are accelerating the transformation of our business environment into a permanent 21st century world of electronic communications, virtual offices and networked interactions.
By Jane Wester | May 18, 2020
The filing comes after New York County Supreme Court Justice Melissa Crane ruled in February that the ad agency, Ackerman McQueen, must comply with a subpoena from the Attorney General's Office.
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