By David R. Gelfand, Daniel M. Perry, Andrew B. Lichtenberg and Rachel R. Siegel | November 8, 2019
The Second Circuit changed course from dicta in an earlier decision and now joins the Eleventh Circuit in allowing U.S. courts to compel extraterritorial discovery in support of foreign proceedings.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | November 7, 2019
U.S. District Judge Randolph Moss raised concerns about whether the discovery will be too extensive or could reveal confidential information about Jones Day's clients.
By Alaina Lancaster | Ross Todd | November 6, 2019
A court petition for documents related to Facebook's Cambridge Analytica scandal marks Becerra's office's first public foray into the swirl of litigation against the company.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. D'Annunzio | November 6, 2019
A federal judge has ruled that a former state police official and several prosecutors associated with the Jerry Sandusky investigation who sued disgraced ex-Attorney General Kathleen Kane over her alleged leak of grand jury information and release of controversial emails involving the plaintiffs cannot gain access to her attorney-client communications.
By Jane Wester | November 5, 2019
The call logs support the account of former "Apprentice" contestant Summer Zervos, wrote Zervos' lawyer Mariann Meier Wang of Cuti Hecker Wang in court filings.
By Alaina Lancaster | November 5, 2019
In addition to repurposing regulatory production documents, a federal judge could ask the company to provide more information on how its millions of apps interact with users. Facebook's attorneys rebutted there were 'not enough engineers on the globe' to perform the task.
By Tom McParland | November 4, 2019
The conversation captured in both recordings has so far played an important role in the lawsuit, which accuses Dershowitz of defaming Giuffre in a series of public statements calling her a perjurer and a prostitute.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Mark A. Berman | November 4, 2019
In his State E-Discovery column, Mark A. Berman uses the recent decision in 'People v. Neulander' as a basis for his discussion of the significance of a juror's improper use of social media, which can rock the foundation of a party's right to a fair trial. He touches upon the various ethical and privacy issues that are tangled into the issue.
By Jason Grant | November 1, 2019
Explaining the law on enforcement-of-money-judgment discovery, the First Department panel said Urban FT Group's "argument that they should not have to produce documents unrelated to the subject matter of the underlying lawsuit misconstrues the law."
By Charles Toutant | October 31, 2019
The court "sees no reason why it should be consciously wrong today because it was unconsciously wrong yesterday," U.S. Magistrate Judge Joel Schneider of the District of New Jersey said.
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