By Mary Pat Gallagher | January 12, 2015
Information about a confidential witness who is expected to testify in a New Jersey drug case must be turned over to the defense—not just information about the case at hand but about other matters on which the witness has assisted prosecutors.
By Tara Lawler and Laura Kibbe | January 8, 2015
Attorneys must understand their obligations and establish defensible processes to demonstrate their competence in today's world of Big Data and outsourcing IT infrastructure.
By Samantha Joseph | January 7, 2015
Don't expect privacy on Facebook during the discovery process, the Fourth District Court of Appeal rules in a lawsuit against Target Corp.
By Leonard Deutchman | January 5, 2015
The story of North Korea allegedly hacking into Sony's IT infrastructure and sending Sony a threatening email that led it to cancel the distribution of a new film, "The Interview," a comedy-adventure film about two Americans who land an interview with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, dominated the news as 2014 winded down.
By John L. Mays | January 5, 2015
The distinction between e-discovery and discovery becomes less and less useful as technology becomes more deeply embedded in our daily lives and businesses.
By John Council | January 4, 2015
After a two-and-a-half-week trial, Austin attorneys Bill Reid and Lisa Tsai recently convinced a Dallas County jury that Credit Suisse defrauded their hedge fund client by overinflating the value of a Nevada resort as part of a 2007 loan refinancing transaction—a verdict that netted their client $40 million in damages.
By Amaris Elliott-Engel | December 29, 2014
The days of never-ending depositions in Commercial Division cases are drawing to an end.
By Sean Doherty | October 23, 2014
Two e-discovery veterans discuss the use and disuse of predictive analytics.
By Jesse Londin | August 1, 2014
How an e-discovery company won a spot at Techstars Chicago, and got funding.
By Camisha Simmons | March 31, 2014
Patient privacy and medical data protection are hot-button issues in the healthcare industry. Though the Bankruptcy Code contains provisions that address privacy protection for individuals, the Bankruptcy Code does not contain an operative provision detailing a process for the protection of healthcare data. Lack of such a provision, however, has not precluded the federal government from independently stepping in to protect patient data.
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